The plaintiff employee benefit plans obtained a judgment against Interstate Builders, Inc. for delinquent plan contributions under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), 29 U.S.C. §§ 1001-1461, and § 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act (LMRA), 29 U.S.C. § 185. When collection efforts failed, plaintiffs filed this action to enforce the judgment against defendant All Steel Construction Inc. as the alter-ego successor of Interstate. Following a trial to the bench, the district court found that All Steel was Interstate’s alter ego and thus liable for the unpaid judgment. All Steel appealed. We noted a potential deficiency in subject matter jurisdiction and had the parties brief the issue. We now hold that this judgment-enforcement action required its own jurisdictional basis independent of
Limits of Judgment-Enforcement Jurisdiction (Sandlin and Peacock)
In
Sandlin v. Corporate Interiors Inc.,
Shortly thereafter, the Supreme Court reaffirmed
H.C. Cook Co.
in an ERISA case, holding that a plaintiff who had obtained a judgment against a corporate employer could not enforce the judgment in a second suit asserting a veil-piercing theory against a shareholder without an independent basis for federal subject matter jurisdiction.
Peacock v. Thomas,
Courts have recognized a number of analytical distinctions that clarify and delimit
Peacock’s
reach. If an alter-ego claim is asserted in conjunction with the underlying federal cause of action, the latter may provide the basis for ancillary jurisdiction over the alter-ego claim, obviating
Peacock
concerns; it is only when an alter-ego claim is asserted in a separate judgment-enforcement proceeding that
Peacock
requires an independent basis for federal jurisdiction.
2
Bd. of
Trs.,
Sheet Metal Workers, Nat’l Pension Fund v. Elite Erectors, Inc.,
Plaintiffs do not, however, invoke any of these clear-cut and circumscribed points here. Instead, they urge us to follow a categorical exception to Peacock adopted by the Seventh Circuit in the Elite Erectors case that, in our view, is both generally ill-conceived and specifically inconsistent with this court’s position in Sandlin.
This categorical exception derives from a narrower and more nuanced analysis set out in
Central States, Southeast and Southwest Areas Pension Fund v. Central Transport, Inc.,
The
Central States
analysis is consistent with
Peacock,
which as the Seventh Circuit noted involved a veil-piercing claim falling squarely on the vicarious side of its direct-versus-vicarious liability distinction.
Id.
It is also reconcilable with our
Sandlin
decision.
Sandlin’s
rejection of alter ego-based jurisdiction was tempered by the qualification that we were
not
“attempting to decide all future cases, when the alter-ego contentions may be more intertwined with the merits of an underlying [federal] claim.”
More concretely, the move from
Central States
to
Elite Erectors
put the Seventh Circuit squarely at odds with this circuit’s holding in
Sandlin.
It is also inconsistent with the application of
Peacock
in a number of other circuits, which have addressed the jurisdictional viability of judgment-enforcement efforts based on alter-ego claims without any suggestion that they should be treated differently than veil-piercing claims.
See, e.g., C.F. Trust, Inc.,
306 F.3d at
133; Epperson, 242
F.3d at 106;
Futura Dev. of P.R., Inc.,
In sum, the jurisdictional principles set out in Sandlin and confirmed in Peacock govern here. No separate federal jurisdictional basis is needed when ERISA liability is asserted directly against a second entity based upon that second entity’s direct role in the ERISA violation. This principle applies regardless of whether ERISA liability is asserted upon the basis of an alter-ego or veil-piercing theory. On the other hand, if ERISA liability is asserted derivatively against a second entity that did not directly participate in the ERISA violation — as for example, where successor liability is asserted — then a separate basis for federal jurisdiction must be established. In short, the determinative factor is not whether ERISA liability is asserted against the second company based upon an alter-ego or veil-piercing theory; rather, the determinative factor is whether ERISA liability is asserted against the second company directly based on the actions of the second company or whether liability is asserted only derivatively or vicariously against the second entity based solely upon the relationship between the second entity and the initial ERISA employer.
Application of Sandlin/Peacock Limits
Plaintiffs’ complaint recites that they had recovered a judgment against Interstate and then alleges that, by virtue of All Steel’s recruitment of employees and use of facilities, equipment, and business operations all traceable to Interstate, “All Steel is the successor-in-interest and/or al
Plaintiffs insist that federal jurisdiction over this action is preserved by the qualification in
Sandlin
regarding judgment-enforcement cases where “the alter ego contentions [are] more intertwined with the merits of an underlying claim.”
Sandlin,
The intertwining reference comes from
Trainor v. Apollo Metal Specialties, Inc.,
While the logical jump here is left vague, plaintiffs evidently equate the determination whether the defendant in
Trainor
had thirteen employees with the determination whether All Steel is Interstate’s alter ego, and then conclude that the latter must be intertwined with the merits of the ERISA claim for purposes of
Sandlin.
Once the tacit line of reasoning is fleshed out, the flaw in the argument becomes clear and it only highlights the deficiency in plaintiffs’ position. The rea
To ignore the “significantly different” nature of a vicarious alter-ego claim vis-a-vis the direct cause of action giving rise to the underlying federal judgment — indeed, going so far as to say that alter-ego status constitutes an element of the underlying cause of action — -would render Sandlin and Peacock meaningless here. There would be no such thing as a judgment-enforcement action based on alter-ego allegations, just many “direct” ERISA claims asserted against alter egos. 5
We have not overlooked
Peacock’s
open-ended caveat that “extraordinary circumstances” (thus far unspecified) might “justify ancillary jurisdiction over a subsequent [judgment-enforcement] suit like this.”
The judgment entered by the district court is VACATED and the cause is REMANDED with directions to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
Notes
. After examining the briefs and appellate record, this panel has determined unanimously to grant the parties’ request for a decision on the briefs without oral argument. See Fed. R.App. P. 34(f); 10th Cir. R. 34.1(G). The case is therefore ordered submitted without oral argument.
. That is not to say that whenever a federal cause of action is asserted against one defendant it is always permissible to extend the resultant federal jurisdiction to other defendants through alter-ego or veil-piercing claims. The conditions for ancillary jurisdiction, now “supplemental jurisdiction” under 28 U.S.C. § 1367(a), must be met. But, without commenting on the result in any particular case, we note that it seems to be commonplace for federal courts to exercise jurisdiction over alter-ego or veil-piercing claims against additional defendants in conjunction with federal causes of action against primary defendants — often without hint of any jurisdictional issue.
See, e.g., Trustees of the Nat'l Elevator Indus. Pension, Health Benefit & Educ. Funds v. Lutyk,
. Indeed, to read
Sandlin’s
"intertwining” reference in any other way, i.e., to suggest that judgment-enforcement jurisdiction could be based on factual overlap that did not also demonstrate the alter ego’s direct participation in the underlying violation, would appear to be precluded now by
Peacock,
which made it clear that mere factual interdependence per se, even of a degree sufficient for traditional ancillary jurisdiction, "will not support federal jurisdiction over a subsequent [judgment-enforcement] lawsuit.”
Peacock,
. Throughout their supplemental brief, plaintiffs indiscriminately rely on cases in which ancillary alter-ego claims were jointly asserted with substantive federal claims. It should be clear from our discussion in footnote 2 above that these cases are inapposite to the judgment-enforcement question we address and resolve here.
. For sake of simplicity, we have generally referred to plaintiffs' alter-ego claim in connection with ERISA. Plaintiffs also invoked the LMRA both in their underlying action against Interstate and here, but the reference to the LMRA does not add to or alter the analysis. As the general terms of
Peacock's
holding reflect,
see
. Use of this means in any particular case would depend on justifying the exercise of ancillary or supplemental jurisdiction, as discussed in footnote 2 above.
