HOWARD GRADEN, individually and on behalf of all others similarly situated, Appellant v. CONEXANT SYSTEMS INC.; DWIGHT W. DECKER; ARMANDO GEDAY; ROBERT MCMULLAN; MICHAEL VISHNY; PLAN COMMITTEE MEMBERS; JOHN DOES 1-10 fictitious names; J. SCOTT BLOUIN; BALAKRISHNAN S. IYER; DENNIS E. O‘REILLY; KERRY K. PETRY; BRADLEY W. YATES
No. 06-2337
United States Court of Appeals, Third Circuit
July 31, 2007
2007 Decisions, Paper 643
McKEE, AMBRO and MICHEL, Circuit Judges
Precedential. Argued April 19, 2007. Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey (D.C. Civil Action No. 05-cv-00695). District Judge: Honorable Stanley R. Chesler.
Jeffrey M. Norton, Esquire (Argued)
Wechsler Harwood
488 Madison Avenue, 8th Floor
New York, NY 10022
Lisa J. Rodriguez, Esquire
Trujillo Rodriguez & Richards LC
8 King Highway West
Haddonfield, NJ 08033
Counsel for Appellant
Richard A. Rosen, Equire
Robyn F. Tarnofsky, Esquire (Argued)
Kerry L. Quinn, Esquire
Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP
1285 Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY 10019-6064
Gregory B. Reilly, Esquire
Deborah A. Silodor, Esquire
Lowenstein Sandler
65 Livingston Avenue
Roseland, NJ 07068
Counsel for Appellees
Jay E. Shushelsky, Esquire
Melvin R. Radowitz, Esquire
American Association of Retired Persons
601 E Street, N.W.
Washington, DC 20049
Howard M. Radzely
Solicitor of Labor
Timothy D. Hauser
Associate Solicitor
Karen Handorf, Esquire
Appellate and Special Litigation
Elizabeth Goldberg, Esquire (Argued)
United States Department of Labor
200 Constitution Avenue, N.W.
Room N-2700
Washington, DC 20210
Counsel for Amicus-Appellant
Jan S. Amundson, Esquire
National Association of Manufacturers
1331 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W.
North Lobby, Suite 1500
Washington, DC 20004
Counsel for Amicus-Appellee
OPINION OF THE COURT
AMBRO, Circuit Judge
We decide whether the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (“ERISA“),
I. Facts and Procedural History
Howard Graden was a Conexant employee until September 2002 and a participant in the Conexant Retirement Saving Plan until October 2004. Like most 401(k) plans, Conexant‘s is a “defined contribution” one in which participants and the employer contribute money into the participants’ individual accounts. Participants elect to invest their money in various predetermined investment packages. Here, Graden directed his money into Conexant Stock Fund B, a package composed entirely of Conexant common stock.
Conexant develops semiconductor devices for broadband communications equipment, and its common stock trades on the NASDAQ. Graden‘s claim centers on the period between March and October 2004. On March 5, 2004, Conexant‘s common stock closed at a 52-week high of $7.42 per share. By October 4, 2004 (when Graden voluntarily cashed out), it had plummeted to $1.70 per share. According to Graden, the March-to-October drop was the result of a risky and ultimately failed merger. Conexant,1 he alleges, breached its fiduciary duties to him and other plan participants by (1) offering the stock fund as an investment option despite the fact that it was not (and was known not to bе) a prudent investment, and (2) making false and misleading statements about the merger that caused him to invest in the fund.
The District Court dismissed Graden‘s action for lack of statutory standing, ruling that he was not a “participant” for purposes of ERISA because he had already cashed out of the plan. Because statutory standing is an issue of subject matter jurisdiction, the Court stopped after concluding that it had none and did not consider Conexant‘s alternative argument that Graden failed to state a claim on which relief could be granted.
Graden appeals to us.2 With him are two amici curiae: the Secretary of Labor and AARP.3 Filing an amicus brief on Conexant‘s side is the National Association of Manufacturers.
II. Statutory Standing
As noted, the question presented is one of statutory standing. There is no
Graden alleges that Conexant‘s mismanagement of plan assets caused a loss to the plan that ultimately harmed him and other plan participants. At the pleadings stage (where we accept Graden‘s allegations as true), this allegation clearly qualifies as a concrete injury traceable to Conexant and redressable by a court. See Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, 504 U.S. 555, 560-61 (1992). Moreover, we see no prudential concerns that would prevent us from exercising jurisdiction.
It is undisputed that the Conexant plan is an employee benefit plan governed by ERISA. In addition, we assume for purposes of this appeal that the defendants are fiduciaries of the Conexant plan. Graden brought this action under
[(1)] mak[ing] good to such plan any losses to the plan resulting from each such breach, . . . [(2)] . . . restor[ing] to such plan any prоfits of such fiduciary which have been made through use of assets of the plan by the fiduciary, and [(3)] . . . such other equitable or remedial relief as the court may deem appropriate, including removal of such fiduciary.
As
The analogy that comes to mind quickest is to shareholder derivative litigation, but the trust-law roots of
Graden claims that he may bring suit as a current “participant” in the Conexant plan.7 ERISA defines a participant as “any employee or former employee . . . who is or may become eligible to receive a benefit of any type from an employee benefit plan.”
To evaluate Graden‘s argument, we begin with the definition of “benefit.”
The Conexant plan is an “individual account plan.”8 See
From this, it is nоt difficult to conclude that Graden has standing as a plan participant. As an account-holder in the Conexant plan, he was entitled to the net value of his account as it should have been in the absence of any fiduciary mismanagement. Because he colorably contends that he has yet to receive that amount, he presses a claim for the remainder of his monetary entitlement under his plan and ERISA—a claim for benefits. That he presses it through
Our holding accords with the reasoning of our sister courts of appeals on this issue. In Harzewski v. Guidant Corp., 489 F.3d 799, 2007 WL 1598097 (7th Cir. 2007) (Posner, J.), the Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit decided this very issue the same way. Explaining whether stock losses like Graden‘s are “benefits,” it stated:
Benefits are benefits; in a defined-contribution plan they are the value of the retirement account when the employee retires, and a breach of fiduciary duty that diminishes that value gives rise to a claim for benefits measured by the difference between what the retirement account was worth when the employee retired and cashed it out and what it would have been worth then had it not been for the breach of fiduciary duty.
Id. at *6.
In Coan v. Kaufman, 457 F.3d 250, 255-56 (2d Cir. 2006), the Second Circuit Court of Appeals noted that various courts have held that former employees who accept lump-sum distributions surrender their participant status and the right to sue for breaches of fiduсiary duty. The Court recognized, however, that these holdings, while sensible in the context of defined benefit plans,10 are more of a problem in defined contribution plans:
[W]hether acceptance of a lump-sum payment terminates a person‘s status as a participant may depend on whether the plan is a “defined benefits” or a “defined contribution” plan. Coan, unlike the plaintiffs discussed in other circuits’ case law, participated in a 401(k) plan, which is an “individual account” or “defined contribution” plan under ERISA. See 29 U.S.C. § 1002(34) . According to ERISA, an individual‘s “accrued benefit[s]” under such a plan are simply “the balance of the individual‘s account.” Id.§ 1002(23)(B) . Arguably, therefore, Coan‘s claim that the lump-sum distribution of her account balance would have been greater absent the defendants’ breach of fiduciary duty is a claim “for benefits” which, if “colorable,” means that she “may become eligible for benefits” and thus qualifies as a “participant” under ERISA.
Id. at 255-56. The Court ultimately did not decide the question, but its analysis is compelling.
Similarly, in Crawford v. Lamantia, 34 F.3d 28, 33 (1st Cir. 1994), the First Circuit Court of Appeals adopted the general rule that former employees with claims for additional benefits have standing, but ruled that the particular plaintiff in that case lacked standing because he “failed to show that defendants’ alleged breach of fiduciary duty had a direct and inevitable effect on his benefits.” In our case, on the other hand, it is clear that the alleged breach had an effect on Graden‘s benefits because their value dropped with the value of Conexant‘s common stock.
III. Additional Arguments
While we believe that our reasoning in Part II is sufficient to resolve this case, we continue to respond more fully to Conexant‘s and its amicus‘s arguments. Specifically, Conexant contends that Graden‘s claim is better characterized as one for damages rather than benefits. Along those same lines, it argues thаt because Graden cannot assert a
The Fifth and Ninth Circuit Courts of Appeals decided the first important cases in this area, and they both drew a line between claims for “benefits” and claims for “damages.” Sommers Drug Stores Co. Employee Profit Sharing Trust v. Corrigan, 883 F.2d 345, 349-50 (5th Cir. 1989); Kuntz v. Reese, 785 F.2d 1410, 1411 (9th Cir. 1986) (per curiam). Having a colorable claim for vested benefits gives a person participant standing, even if his employer has ostensibly cashed him out of the plan. Sommers, 883 F.2d at 350. In those cases, the dispute is over whether the employee was properly accorded all of the benefits due him; hence, for standing purposes all the employee needs is a colorable claim that he is entitled to additional benefits under the plan. The Sommers Court, relying on its decision in Yancy v. Am. Petrofina, Inc., 768 F.2d 707 (5th Cir. 1985), contrasted having a claim for benefits with a claim for damages. Sommers, 883 F.2d at 349-50.
However, relying on a benefits/damages dichotomy is unsatisfying:
The distinction between “benefits” and “damages” is not clear. This is in part attributable to use of words with overlapping meaning to describe mutually exclusive categories. The statute simply grants rights of recovery only to a distinct and limited type of claim which itself is no more than a suit for damages, albeit personally suffered because participants should have been paid under the plan but were not. Clearly, a plaintiff alleging that his benefits were wrongly computed has a claim for vested benefits. Payment of the sum sought by such a plaintiff will not increase payments due him. On the other hand, a plaintiff who seeks the recovery for the trust of an unascertainable amount, with no demonstration that the recovery will directly effect payment to him, would state a claim for damages, not benefits.
Id. In Sommers, the plaintiffs were former employees cashed out of an ERISA plan when the trustees sold the assets of the plan (shares of the employer‘s common stock) for cash in a transaction incident to a merger. The plaintiffs sued under
The Ninth Circuit Court has also clarified that former employees are participants with standing when they sue for disgorgement of a plan fiduciary‘s ill-gotten profits. Amalgamated Clothing & Textile Workers Union v. Murdock, 861 F.2d 1406, 1411 (9th Cir. 1988). The Court held that such profits are vested benefits because under ERISA (and the common law of trusts) the plan has a legal interest in them. Thus, ERISA allows a district court to order disgorging those profits and placing a constructive trust on them for thе ultimate benefit of the plan participants. As the Court noted, disgorgement and the imposition of a constructive trust are both classic equitable remedies, id.; hence, they fit easily in ERISA‘s remedial scheme.
While we believe that Sommers was rightly decided, we cannot endorse the distinction it makes between benefits and damages.11 Per Sommers, suits for miscalculated benefits seek monetary, compensatory relief which is, in common legal parlance, “damages.” 883 F.2d at 349. Yet it is beyond dispute that such relief is at the same time properly characterized as “benefits” because it merely gives the participant what he is entitled to receive under the plan. With this confusing overlap, the dichotomy breaks down. Moreover, the dichotomy appears nowhere in the statute, nor is it necessary to explain the outcomes reached by this line of jurisprudence. In Yancy, for example, the plaintiff sought to recover benefits that he argued would have vested had he not retired early. 768 F.2d at 708-09. Yancy claimed that he retired early because the plan administrator intended illegally to reduce future benefits. Id. at 708. The Court denied
In reaching its decision, the Sommers Court did emphasize what the plaintiff was entitled on the day of his retirement. That, we believe, is the question that properly governs these cases. If the plaintiff colorably claims that under the plan and ERISA he was entitled to more than he received on the day he cashed out, then he presses a claim for vested benefits and must be accorded participant standing. If, on the other hand, he claims that his benefits were all he was entitled to under the plan the day they were paid but that he should yet recover something more, then he presses a claim for something other than vested benefits and is not entitled to standing.13
Perhaps a stronger reason not to rely on the benefits/damages dichotomy is the extent to which it causes confusion with the damages/equitable relief dichotomy that is of great import in
Much of Conexant‘s briefing tries to convince us that what Graden seeks are damages under the Mertens/Great-West formulation. The problem is that whether the relief Graden seeks is properly characterized as legal or equitable, which is the question to which Mertens and Great-West speak, is not relevant here. Unlike
Conexant also relies on the supposed unavailability of
Relying on some language in Sommers, Conexant also argues that Graden‘s claim is too speculative or difficult to calculate to be a claim for benefits. Indeed, it is true that the Sommers Court opined that someone asserting a claim for an “unascertainable amount” would not state a claim for benefits. 883 F.2d at 350. This portion of Sommers, however, is incorrect. As Judge Posner put it in Harzewski, “there is nothing in ERISA to suggest that a benefit must be a liquidated amount in order to be recoverable.” 2007 WL 1598097, at *6.
Moreover, herе the amount is hardly unascertainable. Rather, the measure of damages is the amount that affected accounts would have earned if prudently invested.
In determining what the Plan would have earned had the funds been available for other Plan purposes, the district court should presume that the funds would have been treated like other funds being invested during the same period in proper transactions. Where several alternative investment strategies were equally plausible, the court should presume that the funds would have been used in the most profitable of these.
Donovan v. Bierwirth, 754 F.2d 1049, 1056 (2d Cir. 1985). Thus, if Graden succeeds on thе merits, the District Court will look to the prudent investment alternatives that the Conexant plan offered during this period to determine what the Conexant Stock Fund B investors would have earned but for Conexant‘s breach.
Following the analysis in Part II, Graden‘s status as a participant flows naturally
We pose another hypothetical: assume that аn active participant in the Conexant plan brings a
Amicus National Association of Manufacturers urges that we affirm because of the ramifications of labeling someone like Graden a “participant.” The specific concern is that it will require employers to make costly disclosures to people who, as far as the employer is concerned, are cashed out. This worry overstates, we believe, the concern. First, the inclusion of ostensibly cashed-out employees in the category of participants derives from the text of the definition and from Firestone, 489 U.S. at 103, not from our case. It was Firestone that held that anyone asserting a colorable claim for benefits is a participant. Id. In this case, we merely clarify that a benefit encompasses both miscalculations of a person‘s entitlement and reductions traceable to fiduciary malfeasance.
Second, we cannot imagine holding a plan fiduciary liable for failing to provide information to someone who, as far as the fiduciary knows, is cashed out. Informational obligations may reattach once
IV. Conclusion
In sum, we hold that, when determining participant standing under ERISA, the relevant inquiry is whether the plaintiff alleges that his benefit payment was deficient on the day it was paid under the terms of the plan and the statute. If so, he states a claim for benefits, which, if colorablе, makes him a participant with standing to sue. If, on the other hand, he seeks extracontractual damages or benefits that never vested, then he is not a participant, and a federal court cannot entertain his suit. Here, because Graden merely seeks the full amount of benefits owed him given Conexant‘s alleged breach of its duty of prudent investment, he has standing to maintain this suit, and we therefore vacate the District Court‘s order dismissing Graden‘s complaint for lack of statutory standing and remand for further proceedings.
