Case Information
*1
Oрinions of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit
4-23-2001
Eichorn v. AT&;T Corp
Precedential or Non-Precedential: Docket 99-5791
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Recommended Citation
"Eichorn v. AT&;T Corp" (2001). 2001 Decisions. Paper 87. http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_2001/87
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*2 Filed April 23, 2001 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT No. 99-5791 KURT H. EICHORN; WILLIAM J. HUCKINS; T. ROGER KIANG; EDWARD W. LANDIS; ORLANDO NAPOLIT ANO, individually and on behalf of all others similarly situated; GILBERT G. DALEY; SUSAN H. DIBONA; BETH KING; MICHAEL S. ORATOWSKI; THOMAS L. SALISBURY; LAWRENCE W ALSH, individually and on behalf of all others similarly situated, Appellants v. AT&;T CORP; LUCENT TECHNOLOGIES, INC.; TEXAS PACIFIC GROUP On Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey D.C. Civil Action Nos. 96-cv-03587 &; 96-cv-04674 (Honorable Mary Little Cooper) Argued December 12, 2000 Before: SCIRICA and AMBRO, Circuit Judges, and POLLAK, District Judge* (Filed: April 23, 2001)
- The Honorable Louis H. Pollak, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, sitting by designation.
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NOEL C. CROWLEY, ESQUIRE
(ARGUED)
Crowley & Crowley
10 Park Place
Morristown, New Jersey 07960
Attorney for Appellants
JONATHAN E. HILL, ESQUIRE
(ARGUED)
KATHY A. LAWLER, ESQUIRE
Pitney, Hardin, Kipp & Szuch
P.O. Box 1945
Morristown, New Jersey 07962
JAMES E. TYRRELL, JR., ESQUIRE
(ARGUED)
SCOTT L. WEBER, ESQUIRE
Latham & Watkins
One Newark Center, 16th Floor
P.O. Box 10174
Newark, New Jersey 07101
Attorneys for Appellees,
AT&T Corp. and Lucent
Technologies, Inc.
DAVID M. FABIAN, ESQUIRE
(ARGUED)
Traflet & Fabian
264 South Street
Morristown, New Jersey 07960
Attorney for Appellee,
Texas Pacific Group
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OPINION OF THE COURT
SCIRICA, Circuit Judge.
In this appeal from the grant of summary judgment we must decide whether defendants AT&;T Corp., NCR Corp., Lucent Technologies, and Texas Pacific Group's agreement to restrict the hiring of certain employees upon Lucent's sale of Paradyne Corp. was a violation of S 1 of the Sherman Antitrust Act. We also must decide whether this no-hire agreement which effectively cancelled the plaintiff employees' AT&;T pension bridging rights violated S 510 of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act. W e hold the no-hire agreement was a valid covenant not to compete that was reasonable in scope and therefor e not a violation of S 1 of the Sherman Act. But also we hold plaintif fs have presentеd sufficient prima facie evidence of AT&;T and Lucent's specific intent to interfer e with an ERISA funded employee pension fund to survive summary judgment on the ERISA S 510 claim.
I.
In July 1995, AT&;T, a long distance telephone and wireless services provider, decided to sell one of its affiliates, Paradyne Corp., a manufacturer of network access products for the telecommunications industry. Contemplating the sale, AT&;T wanted to ensur e that Paradyne remained a viable entity because A T&;T and its other affiliates, including Lucent Technologies, purchased many of the network access products Paradyne manufactured. To make Paradyne mor e attractive to buyers as an ongoing business, AT&;T adopted a human r esource plan that placed restrictions on Paradyne employees' ability to transfer to other divisions of AT&;T ("the Preliminary Net"). Specifically, the Preliminary Net precluded an employee who voluntarily left Paradyne from being hired by any other division of AT&;T. The pr emise for the hiring bar was AT&;T's belief that one of Paradyne's most marketable assets was its skilled employees. The retention of
*5 Paradyne's employees, therefore, was considered essential for the sale of Paradyne.
Shortly after adopting the Preliminary Net, A T&;T consummated a business reorganization plan resulting in three independent companies: AT&;T, Lucent Technologies, and NCR Corp. (the "trivestiture"). As part of the trivestiture, AT&;T transferred ownership of Paradyne to Lucent. Consistent with the Preliminary Net, the Paradyne employees, now employed by Lucent, were pr ecluded from seeking re-employment at any other AT&;T division or affiliate after the trivestiture.
On July 31, 1996, Lucent sold Paradyne to Texas Pacific Group. Before closing, Lucent agreed, on behalf of itself and the other former AT&;T affiliates, that it would not hire, rehire, retain, or solicit the services of any Paradyne employee or consultant whose annual income exceeded $50,000. This "Pre-Closing Net" was consistent with the understanding that Texas Pacific Group's interest in purchasing Paradyne was based on its desir e to acquire the technical skills of Paradyne's employees for a sufficient period of time to ensurе a successful transition of ownership.
Once the deal was closed, Lucent and Texas Pacific Group entered a post-closing agreement ("Post-Closing Net") in which Lucent warranted on behalf of itself and the other AT&;T affiliates that for 245 days ( 8 months) following the sale and the expiration of the Pre-Closing Net, it would not seek to hire, solicit or rehire any Paradyne employee or consultant whose compensation exceeded . The eight month no-hire agreement had the practical effect of cancelling the Paradyne employees' accrued pension benefits under their former AT&;T pension plans. Under the AT&;T pension plan, employees were entitled to "bridging rights" which allowed them to retain their level of accrued pension benefits if they left AT&;T and r eturned within six months. After six months, the bridging rights expir ed. Employees rehired after the six month period would need five years of employment to regain their pr evious pension levels. Because the Post-Closing Net barred Paradyne employees from returning to an A T&;T affiliate for eight
*6 months, these employees automatically lost the bridging rights they had acquired under their AT&;T pensions.
Before the sale was consummated, Texas Pacific Group hired an outside consultant to determine the benefit package it could offer the Paradyne employees. Paradyne's Vice-President of Human Resources, Sherril Claus Melio, who had previously held the same position when Paradyne was owned by AT&;T and Lucent, assisted the consultant in drafting various benefit plan proposals. The consultant concluded that in order to make Paradyne financially competitive, Texas Pacific Group could not offer the same pension package AT&;T had previously of fered its employees. Although Melio's exact role in T exas Pacific Group's decision is disputed, Texas Pacific Group ultimately decided not to offer a defined pension benefits program to its new employees.
The plaintiffs are former Paradyne employees who allege the Preliminary Net, as well as the Pre and Post-Closing Nets, collectively reprеsent an unlawful group boycott in violation of S 1 of the Sherman Act. Additionally, they contend the defendants conspired to eliminate their pension benefits thereby engaging in an illegal price fixing scheme in violation of S 1 of the Sher man Act. Furthermore, they allege the no-hire agreement, which effectively cancelled Paradyne employees' bridging rights under their AT&;T pensions, violated S 510 of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act.
In addressing these claims, the District Court held that plaintiffs failed to prove a violation ofS 1 of the Sherman Act and failed to produce sufficient prima facie evidence of AT&;T and Lucent's specific intent to inter fere with an ERISA funded pension plan to support their S 510 claim. The court, therefore, granted defendants' motion for summary judgment. After the grant of summary judgment, plaintiffs filed a discovery motion in connection with an anticipated motion for class certification which the District Court denied. This appeal followed.
II. The District Court had jurisdiction under 15 U.S.C.S 26 and 29 U.S.C. S 1140 because plaintiffs' claims allege
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violations of S 1 of the Sherman Antitrust Act and S 510 of ERISA. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C.S 1291. We exercise plenary review over the District Court's grant of summary judgment on plaintiffs' antitrust and ERISA claims. Big Apple BMW, Inc. v. BMW of N. Am., Inc.,
III.
Section 1 of the Sherman Act provides: Every contract, combination in the form of trust or otherwise, or conspiracy, in restraint of trade or commerce among the several states, or with for eign nations, is hereby declared to be illegal.
15 U.S.C. S 1 (1994).
Under S 1, unreasonable restraints on trade are prohibited because they inhibit competition within the market. Bus. Elecs. Corp. v. Sharp Elecs. Corp. ,
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conditions" in the relevant market. Standard Oil Co. of N.J. v. United States,
A.
We hold the AT&;T Preliminary Net was not a violation of S 1 of the Sherman Act. The District Court found that "as of . . . the date that the Preliminary Net was put into effect . . . , Lucent was a wholly-owned subsidiary of A T&;T, and accordingly, the two companies were a singular entity that could not conspire to violate the Antitrust laws." Eichorn v. AT&;T Corp., CA No. 96-3587, slip op. at *17 (D.N.J. September 10, 1999). In Copperweld Corp. v. Independence Tube Corp.,
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As Supreme Court and our precedent make clear, only anti-competitive actions between competitors give rise to Sherman Act liability. Copperweld,
We next turn to plaintiffs' claim that the Pre and PostClosing Nets, collectively referred to as the no-hire agreement, represent an illegal gr oup boycott and a horizontal price fixing conspiracy under S 1 of the Sherman Act. Plaintiffs allege Lucent, AT&;T and T exas Pacific Group horizontally competed for the plaintiff employees' technical skills and services. As competitors, they ar gue, the defendants conspired to suspend competition for plaintiffs' technical services with the purpose and the ef fect of locking them out of the labor market. See Anderson v. Shipowners Ass'n of the Pac. Coast,
But the facts here are substantially dif ferent from the classic per se horizontal price fixing and gr oup boycott
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conspiracies the Court has generally found to be per se antitrust violations. Broad. Music, Inc. ,
B.
Private plaintiffs pursuing claims under S 1 of the Sherman Act have standing when they suf fer an antitrust injury that is causally related to the defendants' allegedly illegal anti-comрetitive activity. Brunswick,
Id. (internal quotes omitted).
It is well established that an antitrust injury r eflects an activity's anti-competitive effect on the competitive market. Atlantic Richfield Co. v. USA Petroleum Co.,
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Cir. 1995). While a plaintiff may have individually suffered an injury as a result of defendants' actions, the antitrust laws were designed to protect market-wide anticompetitive activities. Atlantic Richfield,
In dismissing plaintiffs' antitrust claims the District Court stated,
Plaintiffs apparently argue that the injury to competition is that they are prevented fr om providing their services to AT&;T, Lucent or its affiliates. Put simply, the antitrust laws are not concer ned with injury to competitors (here the plaintif fs), but with injury to competition. That these plaintiffs are рrevented from working at AT&;T , Lucent or their affiliates for the limited time period during which the pre-closing and post-closing nets were in effect is not an injury to competition. In our view, plaintif fs' allegations of economic injury to themselves misperceive the nature of the injury which is required to be established in order to sustain a claim under Section 1 of the Sherman Act.
Eichorn, CA No. 96-3587, slip op. at *20-21 (internal citations omitted).
While employees who are precluded fr om selling their labor have not necessarily suffered an antitrust injury, "employees may challenge antitrust violations that are premised on restraining the employment market." Phillip Areeda &; Herbert Hovenkamp, Antitrust Law P 377a (rev. ed. 1995) (footnotes omitted); see also Brian R. Henry,
Sorry, We Can't Hire You . . . We Promised Not To': The Antitrust Implications of Entering Into No-Hir e Agreements, 11-Fall Antitrust 39 (1996) ("Most courts considering the issue have held that employees suffer
injury' recognized by
*12 the antitrust laws when their employment opportunities are restricted by a no-hire agreement between potential employers, and thus hаve standing to sue the entity imposing such a provision."). As a leading treatise on antitrust states:
Antitrust law addresses employer conspiracies controlling employment terms precisely because they tamper with the employment market and thereby impair the opportunities of those who sell their services there. Just as antitrust law seeks to pr eserve the free market opportunities of buyers and sellers of goods, so also it seeks to do the same for buyers and sellers of employment services. It would be perverse indeed to hold that the very object of the law's solicitude and the persons most directly concerned--per haps the only persons concerned--could not challenge the r estraint.
An employee overcomes the primary hurdle to standing when he shows that the alleged violation restrains competition in the labor market. Of course, he must still show injury-in-fact that was proximately caused by the violation and, in damage cases, that can be quantified without undue speculation.
Areeda &; Hovеnkamp, supra, at P 377c (footnotes omitted).
In Anderson, the Supreme Court held that a seaman, on behalf of himself and other members of the seamen's union, could sue an association of most of the shipowners in the region when the shipowners' association adopted unduly strict regulations governing employment.
While Anderson was decided many years befor e the
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Supreme Court detailed the antitrust injury r equirement in Brunswick, 1 several courts since Brunswick have found that no-hire agreements which preclude employees from seeking employment from a third party employer can give rise to antitrust injury. In Cesnick v. Chrysler Corp. ,
More recently in Roman v. Cessna Air craft Co.,
-
Several other courts prior to Brunswick held that employees barred from seeking employment from a thir d party employer because of a nohire agreement have standing to litigate aS 1 claim. See, e.g., Radovich v. Nat'l Football League,
352 U.S. 445 (1957) (coach precluded from working in National Football League because of agr eement among all of the teams in the league had standing); Quinonez v. Nat'l Assoc. of Secs. Dealers, Inc.,540 F.2d 824 (5th Cir. 1976) (plaintiff who was fired by securities dealer and was unable to find employment with another securities dealer because of agreement among dealer firms not to hire an employee who was discharged by another fir m suffered sufficient injury to proceed with antitrust claim); Tugboat, Inc. v. Mobile Towing Co.,534 F.2d 1172 , 1176 (5th Cir.) ("Ther e can be little doubt that an employee who is deprived of a work opportunity has been injur ed . . . because the selling of one's labor is a commercial interest."), reh'g denied,540 F.2d 1085 (5th Cir. 1976); Nichols v. Spencer Int'l Press, Inc.,371 F.2d 332 (7th Cir. 1967) (plaintiff prohibited from seeking employment at competing employer because of agreement between employers in industry not to hire each other's employees suf fered injury sufficient to bring antitrust claim).
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that agreement because it prevented him fr om selling his services to the highest bidder . . . . W e believe this is sufficient to allege antitrust standing.
Id. at 545; see also Law, 134 F .3d 1010 (coach whose opportunities in employment market were impair ed by agreement among members of NCAA to limit the maximum compensation paid to coaches suffered antitrust injury).
In a similar manner, plaintiffs her e allege they have been precluded from selling their services to three companies within the industry, NCR, AT&;T and Lucent, and that the no-hire agreement interfered with their ability to attain pension benefits. Because the no-hire agr eement directly impeded plaintiffs' ability to sell their labor to at least three companies within the competitive market and ef fectively cancelled their AT&;T pension benefits, we believe they have standing to litigate their S 1 claims. Roman,
C.
Plaintiffs contend on appeal that the no-hir e agreement was a group boycott and a horizontal pricefixing conspiracy. See Klor's v. Broadway-Hale Stores, Inc.,
*15
Univ. of Okla.,
Horizontal price fixing . . . [is] or dinarily condemned as a matter of law under an `illegal per se' appr oach because the probability that these practices ar e anticompetitive is so high . . . . In such circumstances a restraint is presumed unreasonablе without inquiry into the particular market context in which it is found.
While plaintiffs contend the no-hire agr eement was per se illegal because it was a horizontal group boycott and a price fixing conspiracy, we can find no support within the relevant case law for this label. Br oad. Music, Inc.,
*16 courts can balance the effect of the alleged anti-competitive activity against its competitive purposes within the relevant product and geographic markets.
Acknowledging this judicial hesitance to extend the per se rule to new categories of antitrust claims, we note there are no Supreme Court cases nor any federal cases that have applied the per se rule in similar factual circumstances. The only two federal cases that have analyzed similar group boycott and price fixing claims have held that no-hire agreements executed upon the sale of a corporation are analyzed under the rule of
eason. Coleman v. Gen. Elec. Co.,
Similarly in Cesnick, former employees of Chrysler's NonAutomotive Air Conditioning Division sued underS 1 when Chrysler sold the division to the Fedders Corporation and agreed not to rehire its employees.
*17 agreement was designed to increase the likelihood that Fedders would enjoy the services of the experienced AirTemp employees, an obviously sound business purpose. To the extent that the agreement effectively restrained competition between Chrysler and Fedders for employee services, a competition whose existence is entirely conjectural, that effect was incidental as well as de minimus.
Id. at .
Cognizant that there are no Supreme Court cases holding no-hire agreements entered upon the legitimate sale of a business to a third party are per se antitrust violations, 2 and recognizing that the only two federal courts that have addressed the issue have declined to apply the per se rule, we hold the no-hire agreement here is more appropriately analyzed under the rule of reason. As several courts have recognized, the per se rules of illegality ar e the exception to antitrust analysis and are only employed in certain recognized categories. DeLong Equip. Co. v. Washington Mills Abrasive Co.,
The District Court properly characterized the no-hire agreement as a common law covenant not to compete. As we discuss, courts have uniformly found that covenants not to compete should be examined under the rule of
eason. See, e.g., McDonald v. Johnson &; Johnson,
*18 purposes and its impact on the relevant pr oduct and geographic markets. D.
Under the rule of reason, we look at the totality оf the circumstances surrounding an alleged anti-competitive activity, including facts peculiar to the relevant business, to determine the "nature or purpose" of the allegedly illegal restraint. Topco Assocs., Inc.,
It [i]s of importance, as an incentive to industry and honest dealing in trade, that, after a man ha[s] built up a business with extensive good will, he should be able to sell his business and good will to the best advantage, and he could not do so unless he could bind himself by an enforceable contract not to engage in the same business in such a way as to prevent injury to that which he was about to sell.
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United States v. Addyston Pipe &; Steel, 85 F . 271, 280 (6th Cir. 1898), modified,
In this vein, courts have characterized covenants not to compete executed upon the legitimate transfer of ownership of a business as ancillary restraints on trade. Id.; see also Bus. Elecs. Corp.,
The District Court found, In our view, the pre-closing and post-closing nets at issue here are a subset of common law covenants not to compete. Moreover, it is clear that the no-hire agreements imposed restrictions which wer e "ancillary to legitimate transactions," and thus properly considered an ancillary restraint.
Eichorn, CA No. 96-3587, slip op. at *23 (internal citation omitted).
We agree that the no-hire agr eement was not an unreasonable restraint of trade underS 1 of the Sherman Act. Frackоwiak v. Farmers Ins. Co., Inc. ,
*20 precluded the employees from seeking employment at an AT&;T affiliate for 245 days, the primary purpose of the agreement was not anti-competitive. Contrary to plaintiffs' assertions, we can find no evidence to support their claim that the no-hire agreement was executed for the improper purpose of restraining trade and the cost of labor in the telecommunications industry. The primary purpose of the no-hire agreement was to ensure the successful sale of Paradyne to Texas Pacific Grоup which r equired workforce continuity. 3 Any restraint on plaintiffs' ability to seek employment at AT&;T and any effect on their pension bridging rights was incidental to the effective sale of Paradyne.
Because the no-hire agreement was a legitimate ancillary restraint on trade, we must determine whether the eight month restriction from employment at an A T&;T affiliate was reasonable or whether it went further than necessary to ensure the successful transition of ownership. Cesnick,
We do not think the eight month restriction on reemployment at an AT&;T affiliate was unr easonably broad. It is reasonable to believe Texas Pacific Group would require the technical skills of these employees for at least this eight month period, if not longer, to ensure a successful transition of ownership from Lucent. 3. Plaintiffs contend the true motive of the no-hire agreement was not work force continuity but eliminating pension benefits to reduce Texas Pacific Group's costs. They argue that if work force continuity were really the motive, Texas Pacific Group could have offered enhanced benefits packages to entice the work force to remain with Paradyne rather then simply agreeing to cancel their AT&;T pension benefits. But the existence of alternative means to achieve a legitimate business goal does not in itself mean the defendants' chosen course of action was uncompetitive and improper.
*21 Furthermore, the no-hire agr eement only precluded the plaintiffs from working at Lucent or an A T&;T affiliate. The employees were free to leave Texas Pacific Group and seek emplоyment elsewhere within the telecommunications industry. Significantly, there is no evidence in the record to support plaintiffs' claim that AT&;T was the only employer in the market to whom they could sell their services. As the District Court found, there are over twenty other telecommunications firms that compete for plaintiffs' technical services. Furthermore, the market for plaintiffs with more generalized educational and work backgrounds includes "a vast number of jobs" nationwide. Eichorn, CA No. 96-3587, slip op. at *27-28 n.17.
Therefore, we hold the no-hire agr eement was not an unreasonable restraint on trade. As an ancillary covenant not to compete, the no-hire agreement was reasonable in its restrictions on the plaintiffs' ability to seek employment elsewhere. Nat'l Soc'y of Prof 'l Eng'rs,
Eichorn, CA No. 96-3587, slip op. at *29-30 n.18. We believe this narrow market definition is inappropriate. As we recently stated, "[t]he outer boundaries of a product market are determined by the reasonable interchangeability
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of use or the cross-elasticity of demand between the product itself and substitutes for it." Queen City Pizza, Inc., v. Domino's Pizza, Inc.,
By defining the market so narrowly that it only includes the defendants, plaintiffs' proffer ed geographic and product markets are unrealistic. 4 The market for the plaintiffs' labor is much broader. We agree with the District Court that the relevant market is not limited to AT&;T and its affiliates but rather includes all those technology companies and network services providers who actively compete for employees with the skills and training possessed by plaintiffs. 5
4. Plaintiffs argue they are under no obligation to define the relevant product and geographic markets because the defendants' conduct per se violated the antitrust laws. See Jefferson Parish Hosp. Dist. No. 2 v. Hyde,
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Because market realities reflect that the no-hire agreement did not have a significant anti-competitive effect on the plaintiffs' ability to seek employment within this broader telecommunications market nor that itfixed the cost of labor in the industry, we conclude it was not an antitrust violation under the rule of reason. 6 The antitrust laws were not designed to protect every uncompetitive activity, but rather only those activities that have anticompetitive effects on the market as a whole. Broad. Music, Inc.,
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Mates &; Pilots Pension Plan,
IV.
We now turn to whether the no-hir e agreement, which effectively cancelled plaintiffs' A T&;T pension bridging rights, violated S 510 of ERISA. Section 510 of ERISA provides:
It shall be unlawful for any person to dischar ge, fine, suspend, expel, discipline or discriminate against a participant or beneficiary for exercising any right to which he is entitled under the provisions of the employee benefit plan . . . for the purpose of interfering with the attainment of any right to which such participant may become entitled under the plan.
29 U.S.C. S 1140 (1994).
Congress enacted S 510 "primarily to prevent unscrupulous employers from discharging or harassing their employees in order to keep them fr om obtaining vested pension benefits." DeWitt v. Penn-Del Directory Corp.,
*25
The crucial threshold issue in this case is whether defendants AT&;T and Lucent8 had the specific intent to interfere with the Paradyne employees' pension benefit rights or whether the cancellation of the bridging rights was merely an incidental by-product of the sale of Paradyne. DeWitt,
*26
Although the District Court found this evidence insufficient to support a finding of specific intent to interfere with the plaintiffs' benefit plans, 9 Eichorn, CA No. 96-3587, slip op. at *9-12, we believe at this stage of the proceedings plaintiffs have presented sufficient circumstantial evidence of intent to inter fere with their pension rights to create a genuine issue of material fact. 10 Turner,
*27 legitimate reason is pre-textual."). Because plaintiffs have submitted sufficient prima facie evidence to withstand defendant's motion for summary judgment, we will r everse and remand for further proceedings.
V .
Plaintiffs contend the District Court err ed when it denied their motion for additional discovery for a contemplated motion for class certification on their ERISAS 510 claim. In denying plaintiffs' motion the District Cоurt stated, "[W]e do not find that . . . Third Circuit[ ] . . . [precedent] requires this Court to keep this matter open so that plaintif fs may engage in discovery and motion practice on the issue of class certification when the underlying claims have been dismissed with prejudice." Eichor n, CA No. 96-3887, slip op. at *18. Because we hold plaintiffs have submitted sufficient prima facie evidence to support their ERISA S 510 claim, we believe they may be entitled to additional discovery to pursue a possible motion for class certification. Accordingly, we direct the District Court on remand to address plaintiffs' motion for additional discovery and any future motion for class certification under the requirements of Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(c). VI.
For these reasons, we will affirm the District Court's dismissal of plaintiffs' antitrust claims. W e will reverse the grant of summary judgment on plaintiffs' ERISAS 510 claims. We will also reverse the Court's order denying plaintiffs' motion for additional discovery for an anticipated class certification motion and, on remand, direct the District Court to address this issue in accor dance with the requirements of Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(c).
A True Copy: Teste: Clerk of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit
