JOHN C. MCLEMORE, Trustee, Plaintiff-Appellant (10-5480), EFS, INC, et al. Plaintiffs-Appellants (10-5491), v. REGIONS BANK, as Successor in Interest by Merger to AmSouth Bank, Defendant-Appellee.
Nos. 10-5480/5491
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
June 8, 2012
682 F.3d 414 | 2012 FED App. 0172P (6th Cir.) | 12a0172p.06
RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206. Appeals from the United States District Court for the Middle District of Tennessee at Nashville. Nos. 08-00021; 08-01003—Aleta Arthur Trauger, District Judge. Argued: March 1, 2012. Decided and Filed: June 8, 2012.
Before: MERRITT and COOK, Circuit Judges; and COX, District Judge.*
COUNSEL
ARGUED:
COOK, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which COX, D. J., joined. MERRITT, J. (pp. 18-21), delivered a separate dissenting opinion.
OPINION
COOK, Circuit Judge. These consolidated appeals stem from the misconduct of Barry Stokes, an investment advisor who purloined millions of dollars from the employee-benefits plans that he managed. Stokes and his company, 1Point Solutions, LLC (“1Point“), held the fiduciary accounts of the defrauded plans—along with Stokes‘s personal accounts—with Defendant-Appellant Regions Bank (“Regions“). Plaintiffs-Appellants John McLemore, Stokes‘s bankruptcy trustee (“the Trustee“), and several former clients of 1Point (collectively, “EFS“) allege that Regions negligently or knowingly allowed Stokes to steal from the fiduciary accounts held at Regions. The Trustee sued Regions under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (“ERISA“), and both EFS and the Trustee brought state-law claims. In 2008, the district court dismissed the Trustee‘s ERISA claims. In 2010, the district court found that ERISA preempted both plaintiffs’ state-law claims and granted judgment on the pleadings in favor of Regions. The Trustee appeals the district court‘s 2008 dismissal of its ERISA claims, and both parties appeal the 2010 dismissal of their state-law claims. We AFFIRM.
I.
Plaintiffs allege the following. Stokes served as the sole owner and operator of 1Point, which managed various employee-benefits plans and 401(k) retirement plans as a third-party administrator (“TPA“). 1Point also acted as TPA for a number of flexible-spending accounts, health-savings accounts, dependent-care accounts, and various other “cafeteria plans,” all of which allow employees to set aside pre-tax income for qualifying purposes. ERISA
From the outset, Stokes operated 1Point unlike an ordinary TPA. TPAs generally provide record-keeping services and assist in transferring money, but do not themselves handle money or securities. Stokes, however, directed clients to send funds to accounts at Regions that he had opened in 1Point‘s name. The accounts, which Stokes and 1Point controlled, held substantial funds: in the accounts at Regions, plaintiffs estimate that 1Point‘s 401(k) Plan clients deposited over $5.7 million and 1Point‘s Cafeteria Plan clients deposited $45 million.
Regions advised Stokes and 1Point to structure their accounts in a way that facilitated Stokes‘s fraud. Initially, 1Point intended to establish accounts for each client under the client‘s tax identification number. But to circumvent burdensome “know your customer” rules, which require banks to verify the identities of their customers, Regions insisted that 1Point open the accounts in its own name and simply provide them titles referencing the account‘s corresponding client. In this manner, 1Point opened over 58 accounts with Regions—bearing account names such as “1Point FSA Metro Government Account“—in which it held client funds. Because the accounts bore 1Point‘s name, Stokes—owner and operator of 1Point—was able to transfer money among and out of the accounts, a capability that later allowed him to embezzle customer funds.
Between 2002 and 2006, Stokes stole large sums from these accounts. In furtherance of his criminal scheme, he (1) transferred money from client accounts to his account at Regions, (2) withdrew hundreds of thousands of dollars from the 1Point 401(k) account in the form of cashier‘s checks, (3) used client accounts to fund 1Point‘s operating expenses, and (4) transferred money between customer accounts to pay overdraft fees and conceal his theft. Stokes briefly moved the 1Point accounts to Fifth Third Bank in 2006, but the bank soon closed the accounts for improper activity. Regions failed to exercise the same vigilance.
For the most part, Regions behaved like an ordinary depositary bank. It facilitated 1Point‘s withdrawals and transfers, received over $50 million in deposits for plan accounts, and held plan assets. Regions also collected fees and analysis charges from 1Point‘s accounts, totaling more than $500,000 over the course of 1Point and
Regions’ relationship. As a depositary bank, Regions was subject to various regulations—including provisions of the Bank Secrecy Act,
Regions failed to comply with these regulations. In 2004, the U.S. Financial Crimes Enforcement Network assessed a $10 million fine against Regions and its predecessor, AmSouth Bank, for their failure (1) to report suspicious activity in a timely manner, (2) to develop an anti-money laundering program and implement anti-money laundering policies, and (3) to respond to circumstances in which account holders used Regions bank accounts to further schemes involving embezzlement and fraud. Pointing to these failures in monitoring accounts and Stokes‘s unusual account activity, plaintiffs allege that Regions “knew or should have known” about Stokes‘s misconduct.
In 2006, Stokes and 1Point filed for bankruptcy protection, and plaintiffs then discovered Stokes‘s theft. In August 2007,
The Trustee accuses Regions of failing to take action in the face of Stokes‘s obvious criminal scheme. He alleges that 1Point‘s transactions “triggered red flags” that should have apprised Regions of its duty to investigate the transactions. In his complaint, the Trustee points to a number of irregularities that alerted Regions to Stokes‘s theft—for example, commingling customer accounts and small, “odd dollar” withdrawals from customer accounts. Based on these irregularities, the Trustee argues, Regions “knew or should have known” about the misuse of the funds in 1Point‘s accounts. The Trustee‘s original complaint asserted ERISA claims against Regions, both in its capacity as a fiduciary and as a nonfiduciary, as well as state-law claims based on negligence and aiding and abetting.
Regions moved to dismiss these claims under
A month after the court‘s ruling, a number of 1Point‘s former clients, including EFS, Inc., brought suit against Regions. EFS‘s factual allegations mirrored the Trustee‘s, and the district court consolidated the two lawsuits into one action. After the consolidation, both EFS and the Trustee amended their complaints to include recklessness, unjust enrichment, and violation of the Tennessee Consumer Protection Act (“TCPA“). In addition, EFS brought several aiding-and-abetting claims.
Following plaintiffs’ amendments, Regions moved to dismiss the claims under
II.
On appeal, the Trustee challenges the district court‘s 2008 dismissal of its ERISA claims under
A. Whether the District Court Properly Dismissed the Trustee‘s ERISA Claims
The Trustee first challenges the district court‘s 2008 dismissal of his ERISA claims, arguing that the court erred in holding that Regions fails to qualify as an ERISA fiduciary. Regions agrees with the court‘s conclusion on this point and offers an alternate ground for affirming the court‘s judgment: the Trustee lacked standing to pursue claims on behalf of the defrauded plans. We review a dismissal under
1. Standing
We begin with the question whether the Trustee has standing to sue on behalf of the defrauded plans. Regions contends that he does not, because the Trustee never served as a fiduciary to the plan beneficiaries and because the doctrines of in pari delicto and unclean hands bar suit. We reject both arguments, and find that the Trustee enjoys standing to pursue his ERISA claims against Regions.
Citing In re Cannon, 277 F.3d 838 (6th Cir. 2002), Regions argues that the Trustee cannot recover funds for the benefit of plan participants. The general rule is that a bankruptcy trustee can bring any suit that the debtor could have pursued. Cannon carves out an exception to this rule, however, holding that a bankruptcy trustee lacks standing to bring a cause of action that does not belong to the debtor‘s estate. See id. at 856; cf. Begier v. IRS, 496 U.S. 53, 59 (1990) (“[B]ecause the debtor does not own an equitable interest in property he holds in trust for another, that interest is not ‘property of the estate.‘” (quoting
But this argument ignores the unique role of a trustee acting as an ERISA fiduciary. The Trustee brings this suit in his role as an ERISA fiduciary, rather than his role as a trustee to the debtor‘s estate. This distinguishes the Trustee‘s situation from that of the bankruptcy trustee in Cannon. In Cannon, the assets that the debtor held in trust did not form part of the debtor‘s estate; for that reason, Cannon‘s bankruptcy trustee lacked statutory authority to pursue claims that benefitted the trust beneficiaries. By contrast, the Trustee, acting as an ERISA fiduciary, holds such statutory authority—not because the ERISA plans represent part of the debtor‘s estate (they do not, because the plan assets are held in trust), but because, by virtue of the Trustee‘s control over ERISA-plan funds, ERISA confers the Trustee with additional duties and powers. See
The Trustee‘s complaint easily establishes his ERISA-fiduciary status. Under ERISA, “a person is a fiduciary with respect to a plan to the extent (i) he exercises any discretionary authority or discretionary control respecting management of such plan or exercises any authority or control respecting management or disposition of its assets.”
a civil action for ERISA violations. Accepting these allegations, the Trustee falls within ERISA‘s definition of “fiduciary.” See
The fact that the Trustee no longer controls the stolen assets does not disturb this conclusion. Seizing on
Regions’ remaining two arguments fare no better. First, Regions contends that the district court, rather than the Trustee, controls the ERISA plans’ assets—a fact that the Trustee disputes. Because we accept the Trustee‘s factual allegations as true, this argument fails. See Carrier Corp., 673 F.3d at 444.
Second, Regions faults the Trustee for failing to specify which plans deposited their funds at Regions. But at this stage, the Trustee‘s pleadings need only “contain sufficient factual matter, accepted as true, to state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.” Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 556 U.S. 662, 678 (2009) (internal quotation and citation omitted). For the purposes of pleading standing, we find it sufficient that the Trustee describes the allegedly victimized plans, avers that he acts as successor fiduciary “for each of the plans,” and explains the legal basis for his fiduciary relationship: “exercis[ing] discretionary control over assets of plans subject to ERISA.”
2. Whether the Doctrines of In Pari Delicto and Unclean Hands Bar the Trustee‘s Claims
Regions further argues that the equitable doctrines of in pari delicto and unclean hands—two doctrines that prevent culpable plaintiffs from bringing suit—bar the Trustee‘s claims. See, e.g., Pinter v. Dahl, 486 U.S. 622, 632 (1988). These defenses may have barred the claims of Stokes and 1Point, had those two brought the claims themselves. Because the Trustee steps into the shoes of Stokes and 1Point, Regions argues, the doctrines should bar his claims as well.
Again, Regions misunderstands the Trustee‘s role. The Trustee sues as an ERISA fiduciary representing the plans’ interests, rather than as a bankruptcy trustee suing to enlarge the debtor‘s estate. Any funds that the Trustee recovers as an ERISA fiduciary inure to the ERISA plans’ benefit, rather than to the benefit of the estate‘s creditors. For the
A review of the equitable purposes behind these defenses bolsters our conclusion that they do not apply. As to equitable doctrines, courts limit the application of in pari delicto and unclean hands to the equitable purposes that they serve. See Bateman Eichler, Hill Richards, Inc. v. Berner, 472 U.S. 299, 306-07 (1985). As the Bateman Eichler Court observed, the common-law doctrine of in pari delicto serves the dual purposes of (1) preventing courts from wasting their resources “mediating disputes among wrongdoers” and (2) “deterring illegality.” id. at 306.
Applying the doctrine here serves neither purpose. First, all concede that the ERISA plans are innocent of any wrongdoing. Second, any recovery would benefit only the defrauded plans, such that barring the claims serves no deterring function. See
beneficiaries). Third, because the Trustee brings the ERISA claim in his capacity as an ERISA fiduciary, rather than as a bankruptcy trustee, he shares no blame for the debtor‘s wrongdoings unless he fails to “make[] reasonable efforts under the circumstances to remedy” any known breaches of duty. See
3. Whether Regions Bank Qualifies as an ERISA Fiduciary
Next, the Trustee challenges the district court‘s conclusion that Regions did not serve as a fiduciary to the victim plans. This question stands paramount, because ERISA permits a plaintiff to obtain equitable relief and recover damages from fiduciaries who breach their duties. See
We review a district court‘s determination regarding ERISA-fiduciary status de novo. Hamilton v. Carell, 243 F.3d 992, 997 (6th Cir. 2001); Briscoe v. Fine, 444 F.3d 478, 486 (6th Cir. 2006). Where the parties do not dispute the underlying facts, “a party‘s status as an ERISA fiduciary is purely a question of law.” Hamilton, 243 F.3d at 997. Discerning no factual dispute, we reject the Trustee‘s claim that the district court‘s ruling was premature.
We begin with ERISA‘s description of those who qualify as fiduciaries:
[A] person is a fiduciary with respect to a plan to the extent (i) he exercises any discretionary authority or discretionary control respecting management of such plan or exercises any authority or control
respecting management or disposition of its assets . . . .
Attempting to demonstrate Regions’ fiduciary status, the Trustee marshals a number of allegations from his complaint purportedly describing Regions’ “authority or control” over the ERISA-plan accounts. The allegations fall into five categories: that Regions (1) knew that 1Point‘s accounts held plan assets; (2) should have recognized that 1Point managed these accounts differently than typical third-party administrators of employee-benefits plans; (3) failed to comply with banking regulations that would have uncovered Stokes‘s scheme; (4) advised 1Point to structure its accounts in a way that circumvented “know your customer” rules; and (5) withdrew over $500,000 in “fees and analysis charges” from the plan funds.
The first three allegations miss the mark. Section
The same goes for Regions’ advising 1Point and Stokes as to how it ought to structure the banking aspects of its business. As with mere custody, advising on account structuring offers no foothold for labeling Regions a fiduciary. All control of the accounts remained with 1Point and Stokes.
That leaves the proposition that Regions’ withdrawal of about a half million dollars in fees from 1Point plan accounts demonstrates control over plan assets. For
support, the Trustee points to our decisions in Briscoe and Smith v. Provident Bank, 170 F.3d 609 (6th Cir. 1999), cases where we found ERISA-fiduciary status applicable to a plan custodian exerting unilateral control over plan assets. In Briscoe, the TPA of a company‘s healthcare plan canceled its contract after financial difficulties rendered the company unable to support the plan. 444 F.3d at 484. Upon terminating its relationship with the company, the TPA wrote a check remitting the balance of the funds in the plan‘s account to the company—but retained for itself an “administrative fee” of several thousand dollars. Id. at 484, 490. The court held that the “unilateral disposition of funds held in an account over which it exerted control ma[de] [the TPA] a fiduciary to the extent that it exercised such control upon the termination of its relationship.” Id. at 490; see also Briscoe v. Preferred Health Plan, Inc., 578 F.3d 481, 485-87 (6th Cir. 2009) (limiting the defendant‘s liability in Briscoe to funds over which it exercised control after terminating its agreement with the plaintiff). Similarly, in Smith a bank transferred stock
Neither case supports the Trustee‘s position here because both address the control of plan assets after termination of the contractual relationship with the plans. Here, the Trustee alleges only that “[Regions] regularly withdrew its fees and analysis charges from the trust funds it held.” Nothing suggests that Regions did anything other than collect contractually owed fees. Unlike the Briscoe plaintiff, the Trustee does not allege that Regions unilaterally exercised any power to pay itself fees. Elsewhere in his complaint, the Trustee challenges the amount of the fees as “unreasonable” and argues that the fees constitute unjust enrichment because Regions received them as compensation for its complicity in Stokes‘s fraud. Neither contention undermines the conclusion that Regions collected only routine fees authorized by its depositary agreement with 1Point.
The Trustee fails to proffer—nor have we found—any case extending fiduciary status to a bank under these circumstances. Construing the allegations in the light most favorable to the Trustee, Regions’ withdrawal of routine contractual fees constitutes no
more an exercise of control than any other account holder‘s request effectuated by a depositary bank. Such transactions amount to “control respecting management or disposition of [plan] assets,”
B. Whether the District Court Properly Dismissed Plaintiffs’ State-Law Claims
Both the Trustee and EFS appeal the district court‘s dismissal of their state-law claims against Regions, which alleged (1) negligence and recklessness, (2) unjust enrichment, and (3) violation of Tennessee‘s Consumer Protection Act.
These claims rest on a common set of allegations. Both plaintiffs allege that Regions violated a “duty to monitor the accounts of 1Point.” They also accuse Regions of violating its duty of reasonable care by failing to comply with various banking regulations, arguing that proper compliance with these regulations would have uncovered Stokes‘s fraud.
Plaintiffs also accuse Regions of acting with greater culpability than mere negligence. Both EFS and the Trustee allege that Regions knew that Stokes withdrew money from fiduciary accounts for his personal benefit and nevertheless permitted the illegal withdrawals. EFS‘s complaint goes even further, alleging that Regions “knowingly assisted 1Point Solutions in retaining clients it was defrauding.”
In dismissing plaintiffs’ state-law claims, the district court found that Tennessee‘s Uniform Fiduciaries Act (“UFA“) limited plaintiffs’ claims to allegations of knowing or bad-faith conduct and that ERISA preempted any allegation that survived the UFA‘s bar. On appeal, plaintiffs challenge only the court‘s conclusion regarding
ERISA preemption. We review
The UFA shields depositary banks from liability arising from the actions of a fiduciary depositor, unless the bank acts with “actual knowledge” of a breach or “knowledge of such facts that its action . . . amounts to bad faith.”
What survives the UFA, ERISA preempts. Because ERISA provides a remedy against nonfiduciaries who knowingly participate in a fiduciary‘s violation of ERISA, see
ERISA preempts “any and all State laws insofar as they may now or hereafter relate to any employee benefit plan” governed by ERISA.
To guide courts in determining whether a claim “relates to” a benefit plan, the Sixth Circuit has identified three classes of state-law claims subject to ERISA
preemption: claims based on “state laws that (1) mandate employee benefit structures or their administration; (2) provide alternative enforcement mechanisms; or (3) bind employers or plan administrators to particular choices or preclude uniform administrative practice, thereby functioning as a regulation of an ERISA plan itself.” Briscoe, 444 F.3d at 497 (quoting PONI, 399 F.3d at 698). Plaintiffs’ state-law claims fall within the second category.
Again, Briscoe guides our reasoning. In Briscoe, the court held that ERISA preempted state-law claims of fraud, misrepresentation, and concealment based on a nonfiduciary defendant‘s alleged failure to disclose a healthcare plan‘s financial condition. 444 F.3d at 498. The court reasoned that “[a]ny duty to disclose the financial condition of the plan that [the defendants] might have owed to the plan beneficiaries arose not out of an independent source of law, but out of the existence and nature of the plan itself.” Id. at 499. Accordingly, the court determined that the claims served as an “alternative enforcement mechanism” and concluded that ERISA preempted the claims. Id. at 500 (quoting PONI, 399 F.3d at 698).
ERISA forecloses plaintiffs’ state-law claims for the same reason. As the defendant‘s
In the absence of the UFA, we may have reached a different conclusion. ERISA does not preempt garden-variety claims against nonfiduciaries providing professional services to an ERISA plan based on breaches of professional responsibility. See, e.g., PONI, 399 F.3d at 703 (holding that a negligent misrepresentation claim against a “non-fiduciary service provider” does not implicate ERISA, as it does not require a court to evaluate whether the service provider violated the terms of an ERISA-governed plan). But the UFA bars plaintiffs’ claims to the extent they rest on mere negligence, and the remaining allegations stem from Stokes‘s and 1Point‘s ERISA-imposed duties, and not from a legal duty independent of ERISA.
That ERISA provides its own, limited remedy against Regions for its alleged conduct buttresses this conclusion. Under ERISA, a plan “participant, beneficiary, or fiduciary” may seek an injunction against a nonfiduciary who knowingly participates in a fiduciary‘s violation of ERISA. See
Plaintiffs’ unjust-enrichment claims exemplify such recasting. Previously, the Trustee sought disgorgement of the bank fees—an equitable remedy—from Regions under ERISA‘s civil enforcement provision. See
Against nonfiduciaries, ERISA confines plaintiffs to equitable relief. See
rejected such attempts to supplement the remedies available under ERISA: “[A]ny state-law cause of action that duplicates, supplements or supplants
Plaintiffs complain that this ruling leaves them without a remedy against Regions. This might be true, but “the availability of a remedy under ERISA is not relevant to the preemption analysis.” David P. Coldesina, D.D.S., P.C. v. Estate of Simper, 407 F.3d 1126, 1139 (10th Cir. 2005). “As the Supreme Court recently reiterated, ERISA‘s remedial scheme evidences Congress‘s policy choices and intent to provide only the remedies it specified, and this court is not in a position to second-guess Congress simply because the facts of a particular case might be sympathetic.” Id. (citing Aetna, 542 U.S. at 209).
Because plaintiffs seek damages, there is simply no space between the UFA‘s bar and ERISA‘s preemptive force through which their state-law claims can pass. To the extent that plaintiffs’ claims stem from Regions’ negligence, the UFA bars them; to the extent they arise from Regions’ knowledge of or bad-faith acquiescence in Stokes’ scheme, ERISA preempts them.
III.
For the above reasons, we AFFIRM the district court‘s judgments.
DISSENT
MERRITT, Circuit Judge, dissenting. The law on ERISA preemption is in a state of disarray, to say the least. See, e.g., New York State Conference of Blue Cross & Blue Shield Plans v. Travelers Ins. Co., 514 U.S. 645, 655 (1995) (“prior attempt to construe the phrase ‘relate to’ does not give us much help drawing the line“); California Div. of Labor Standards Enforcement v. Dillingham, 519 U.S. 316, 335 (1997) (Scalia concurring) (“applying the ‘relate to’ provision according to its terms was a project doomed to failure . . . everything is related to everything else“); AETNA Health, Inc., v. Davila, 542 U.S. 200, 222 (2004) (Ginsburg concurring) (“I join the rising judicial chorus urging that Congress and [this] Court revisit what is an unjust and increasingly tangled ERISA regime“); Langbein, “What ERISA Means By ‘Equitable,‘” 103 Colum. L. Rev. 1317 (2003). I find no similar cases preempting banking laws protecting from loss the deposits of customers, including ERISA customers, or regulating bank fees charged to such customers. To the contrary, the Ninth Circuit concluded that Arizona common law was not preempted in an action against Citibank “as a service provider offering nonfiduciary custodial services” to ERISA participants. Arizona State Carpenters’ Pension Trust Fund v. Citibank, 125 F.3d 715, 723 (9th Cir. 1997).
The ERISA clause on preemption barring remedies that “relate to any employee benefit plan” is so broad and so lacking in specific meaning and application that we act basically as a common law court in creating its meaning in individual cases. Therefore, we should state the policies we are implementing and the congressional purpose behind the statute that we are trying to serve. The policy on preemption found in many ERISA cases emphasizes “the normal presumption against preemption” when we are dealing with state “laws of general application,” De Buono v. NYSA-ILA Medical and Clinical Services Fund, 520 U.S. 806, 811-14 (1997). Here we are dealing with common law principles, equitable unjust enrichment principles, and a Tennessee statute of general application.
Having found that Regions, acting only as a depository bank holding cash deposits, does not meet the definition of an ERISA “fiduciary” under
The dismissals in both the Trustee‘s and the participants’ cases were on the pleadings under
Our court‘s idea that state law remedies fail because they add or provide only “an alternative enforcement mechanism” is strange, indeed, when the federal ERISA law provides no “enforcement mechanism” whatever for damages against the misfeasance
of a depository bank that is not a fiduciary. There is nothing, no ERISA cause of action for damages for the state claims to be “alternative” to. There is no ERISA purpose or policy served by withdrawing the protection of state laws of general application. What is the possible harm caused by the enforcement of state laws providing damages if a bank recklessly allows its depositors’ money to be embezzled by a fiduciary?
Plaintiff‘s unjust enrichment claim serves as a good example of the confusion engendered by the preemption defense. We do not know whether the bank withdrew $500,000 from the plaintiffs’ accounts properly or in cahoots with Stokes or in willful blindness to his conduct. Should the bank have to restore some or all of the money removed by the bank from the participants’ accounts? The general common law of unjust enrichment goes back three centuries to the Chancery Court in 17th Century England. The principles underlying unjust enrichment do not interfere with ERISA. Tennessee ostensibly still goes by the old law of unjust enrichment explained by Lord Mansfield in Moses v. MacFerlan, 2 Burr. 1005, 1012, 97 Eng. Rep. 676, 681 (K.B. 1760): “In one word, the gist of this kind of action is, that the defendant, upon the circumstances of the
To foreclose unjust enrichment would leave those whom Congress intended to protect worse off than before ERISA was enacted. ERISA does not require abrogation
of the law of unjust enrichment under these circumstances, and I would not adopt a construction of preemption that perversely deprives the participants of rights they previously possessed and that Congress intended to further protect when it federalized the administration of pension and employee benefit plans in ERISA.
