This appeal from the grant of summary judgment in favor of the defendant requires us to reconsider the much-litigated issue of when a right to health benefits that is granted to retired workers by a collective bargaining agreement (or an ERISA plan, but that is not this case) survives the termination of the agreement. See, e.g.,
Bidlack v. Wheelabrator Corp.,
*542
Casting Corp.,
The plaintiffs complain not only about the grant of summary judgment in favor of the defendant but also about the district court’s denial of their discovery motion. The latter complaint has no possible merit. The motion was filed two months after the date set by the court for the completion of discovery. The plaintiffs gave (and give) no excuse for their tardiness, and so have no grounds for complaining about the district court’s welcome effort to expedite the litigation and spare the parties the expense of protracted discovery, the bane of modern litigation.
The plaintiff class consists of some 45 retired machinists formerly employed at Pabst’s brewery in Milwaukee, plus their spouses and dependents. The members of the class received health benefits under successive collective bargaining agreements between Pabst and the machinists’ union until 1995, when the last such agreement expired (Pabst closed the brewery the following year). They claim that the agreements gave them a vested right to such benefits. The agreements contain three provisions, essentially unchanged from agreement to agreement, conferring benefits on retired employees and their dependents, that bear on this case: (a) Blue Cross and Blue Shield medigap insurance for retirees enrolled in Medicare, plus a Blue Cross-Blue Shield prescription drug program except insofar as the retiree “may become eligible [for a similar benefit] as a result of any future hospital-surgical legislation”; (b) for those retirees not enrolled in Medicare, the same coverage as for active employees; (c) “the coverage described in subsections (a) and (b) shall continue for the covered dependents of a deceased retired employee to the end of the sixth month following the month in which death occurs.”
Pabst argues that it is clear from these provisions that they are effective only during the term of the collective bargaining agreement that contains them. If this is right-if someone who read these provisions without knowing anything about their background or real-world context would say, ‘Tes, it sure looks as if the provisions are in effect only for the term of then Pabst is off the hook as a matter of law (that is, the case would not reach the jury) unless the plaintiffs can adduce (1) objective evidence of (2) a latent, or, as it is sometimes called, an extrinsic, ambiguity. E.g.,
PMC, Inc. v. Sherwin-Williams Co.,
The doctrine of latent ambiguity comes into play, as we have said, only if someone who read the contract without knowledge of its real-world context of application would think it clear. If even this innocent reader would find the contract unclear-if, that is, an ambiguity is apparent just from reading the contract without having to know anything about how it interacts with the world-then the contract has what is called a patent, or intrinsic, ambiguity, and evidence is admissible to cure it. E.g.,
Stone Container Corp. v. Hartford Steam Boiler Inspection & Ins. Co., supra,
So far we have been describing general contract law, rather than anything special to the issue of “vested” employee health benefits (that is, benefits that continue beyond the expiration of the contract creating them). Our en banc decision in
Bidlack
established a presumption that an employee’s entitlement to such benefits expires with the agreement creating the entitlement, rather than vesting, but the presumption can be knocked out by a showing of genuine ambiguity, either patent or latent, beyond silence.
Bidlack v. Wheelabrator Corp., supra,
Cases in other circuits are all over the lot. Some presume vesting. E.g.,
Maurer v. Joy Technologies, Inc., supra,
One case holds that benefits are presumed to vest if they are conferred by a collective bargaining agreement rather than an unbargained-for ERISA plan, on the theory that employee interests are more likely to be reflected in a negotiated agreement than in one presented to employees as a condition of their employment.
Int’l Union, United Automobile, Aerospace & Agricultural Implement Workers v. Yardr-Man, Inc.,
Our presumption against vesting, it is important to emphasize, kicks in only if all the court has to go on is silence. If there is some positive indication of ambiguity, something to make you scratch your head (but the “something” must be either language in the plan or contract itself or the kind of objective evidence that can create a latent ambiguity under principles of contract law,
Murphy v. Keystone Steel & Wire Co., supra,
Bidlack enables the employer to fend off a trial without having thought to have included in the contract an express provision limiting the duration of the benefits. The presumption plugs the interpretive hole that would otherwise be left by silence about duration. But it remains open to a plaintiff to show that the relevant contractual provisions contain either patent or latent ambiguities.
Begin with patent ambiguity and recall the three provisions that bear on the issue of post-termination rights: (a) Blue Cross and Blue Shield medigap insurance for retirees enrolled in Medicare, plus a Blue Cross-Blue Shield prescription drug program except insofar as the retiree “may become eligible [for a similar benefit] as a result of any future hospital-surgical legislation”; (b) for those retirees not enrolled in Medicare, the same coverage as for active employees; and (c) “the coverage described in subsections (a) and (b) shall continue for the covered dependents of a deceased retired employee to the end of the sixth month following the month in which death occurs.” That the coverage in (c) is to continue for a specified time after the retiree dies sets at least an outer limit. But with regard to the duration of the benefits granted by (a) and (b), benefits sought in this case along with dependents’ benefits, the contract is silent except insofar as the reference to future legislation in (a) might be thought to point beyond the expiration of the contract, which seems to us a weak inference. While there is no qualification explicitly negating such an inference-no “unless the collective bargaining agreement has expired” or “during the term of this agreement,” the latter being the formula that we held in Pdbst Brewing Co. v. Corrao eliminated any patent ambiguity&-neither is there any language to suggest that these benefits survive the expiration of the agreement.
It is unclear whether the reference to coverage in clause (b) refers only to the scope of the benefits or also to how long they are to last, though the former seems the more natural meaning to impress on the words, which means that (b) is silent on duration. As is clause (a)-a silence *545 that Pabst argues is pregnant in light of (c), which does mention duration, though not vesting. But the contrary inference to what Pabst seeks to draw from the comparison is as plausible. Dependent coverage, the subject of clause (c), would often continue for a very long time were it not truncated by the six-month provision. Retirees' dependents will generally be younger than retirees, as they may include children. And either because they are younger or because they are women-and retirees' spouses will generally be both, since most of Pabst's maintenance workers we may assume were men, and wives are on average younger than husbands-they will tend to have a longer life expectancy. True, the children will no longer be entitled to medical benefits once they reach adulthood and so cease to be dependents; nevertheless dependent coverage is more open-ended from a durational standpoint than coverage limited to retirees. And true too, the younger the dependents are, the lower their expected health costs are expected to be in the near term; but by the same token, if they are under 65 they are ineligible for Medicare and so may cost the employer more in health benefits than retirees do, since the benefits granted by the collective bargaining agreement are supplementary to Medicare. For these reasons an employer might want to specify a time limit short of death for dependent benefits yet feel no similar need to limit the duration of retirees' benefits.
A search for patent ambiguity must canvass the entire agreement. A provision that seems ambiguous might be disambiguated elsewhere in the agreement. E.g.,
St. Paul Fire and Marine Ins. Co. v. Warwick Dyeing Corp.,
But while Pabst has not proved that the contract clearly excludes vesting, we doubt that the plaintiffs have rebutted the
Bidlack
presumption by demonstrating a patent ambiguity. For when all the toing-and-froing is done, the fact remains that the clauses on which the plaintiffs mainly rely, clauses (a) and (b), are completely silent on duration, in contrast to
Bidlack,
where the collective bargaining said that “those employees who have retired since September 22, 1959 will have the full cost of their Blue Cross-Blue Shield coverage paid by the Company
after they attain sixty-five (65) years of age”
and that those benefits “shall be continued for the spouse after the death of the retiree.”
Davidson v. Belcor, Inc.,
Such evidence does not prove that that interpretation is correct, but it shows that the silence of the collective bargaining agreement with respect to vesting makes the agreement genuinely ambiguous and not merely incomplete. If it were merely incomplete, the Bidlack presumption would complete it and defeat the plaintiffs’ case.
These items of evidence are “objective” in the sense (the relevant sense) that either they can be established by disinterested witnesses, or they are uncontested, or, as here, they are both.
PMC, Inc. v. Sherwin-Williams Co., supra,
But it is important to note that once a contract is found by the court to be patently or latently ambiguous, then (in most jurisdictions, in any event, and in the federal courts) any evidence that would normally be admissible in a trial becomes admissible to show what the contract meant.
Dawn Equipment Co. v. Micro-Trak Systems, Inc.,
To summarize the rule of law that we apply, and that requires reversal and a trial:
1. If a collective bargaining agreement is completely silent on the duration of health benefits, the entitlement to them expires with the agreement, as a matter of law (that is, without going beyond the pleadings), unless the plaintiff can show by objective evidence that the agreement is latently ambiguous, that is, that anyone knowledgeable about the real-world context of the agreement would realize that it might not mean what it says. This is the Bidlack presumption and its latent-ambiguity rebuttal.
2. If the agreement makes clear that the entitlement expires with the agreement, as by including such a phrase as “during the term of this agreement,” .then, once again, the plaintiff loses as a matter of law unless he can show a latent ambiguity by means of objective evidence. This is a general rule of contract law, independent of but consistent with Bid-lack.
3. If there is language in the agreement to suggest a grant of lifetime benefits, and the suggestion is not negated by the agreement read as a whole, the plaintiff is entitled to a trial. Of course, if the agreement expressly grants such benefits, the plaintiff is entitled, not to a trial, but to a judgment in his favor. We are speaking of a case in which merely suggestive language creates a patent ambiguity.
4. If the plaintiff is entitled to a trial by reason of either a patent or a latent ambiguity, the normal rules of evidence will govern the trial, and so the parties will not be limited at trial to presenting objective evidence of meaning.
We trust that these simple rules will guide, and perhaps reduce (by facilitating settlement), further litigation over lifetime benefits in collective bargaining agreements and ERISA plans, and maybe litigation over other types of contract as well.
Reversed and Remanded.
