ENTRY ON CROSS-MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
This case presents several questions concerning interest payable on benefits subject to the federal Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA). Plaintiff Debra L. Hizer claims that defendants have failed to pay her all the interest required by Indiana statute on the proceeds of a life insurance policy that her late husband purchased. Because of a dispute over whether Mr. Hizer’s insurance application took effect before his death, the $100,000 benefit was not paid until nearly five years after he died. Mr. Hizer bought the policy pursuant to an employee benefit plan sponsored by defendant General Motors Corporation, so defendants contend that the Indiana statute on which plaintiff bases her claim for additional interest is preempted by ERISA. Plaintiff has filed a motion for partial summary judgment as to the interest rate calculation on the insurance benefits. She has also requested attorneys fees pursuant to ERISA. Defendants have filed a cross-motion for summary judgment.
The court concludes that ERISA preempts the Indiana statute that would otherwise govern plaintiffs right to interest for the delayed payment of life insurance benefits. The court further holds that plaintiff is entitled under ERISA to interest for the delayed payment of benefits, and that the proper measure of interest, under applicable Seventh Circuit authority, is the prevailing market rate or prime rate of interest during the period that payment was delayed. The court grants summary judgment for plaintiff and will award her attorneys fees under ERISA.
Undisputed Facts
Debra L. Hizer is the widow of Virgil L. Hizer. Mr. Hizer worked for Allison Gas Turbine, a division of the General Motors Corporation (collectively “GM”). 1 Mr. Hizer was a participant in the General Motors Life and Disability Benefits Program, an approved employee welfare benefit plan governed by ERISA. One benefit under that plan was a Basic Group Life Insurance policy administered by defendant Metropolitan Life Insurance Company (“MetLife”).
In April 1988, Mr. Hizer received a Met-Life brochure stating he was eligible for Optional Group Life Insurance coverage to supplement the basic coverage he already had. The brochure instructed employees to complete an election form and return it to MetLife to receive the optional coverage. *1457 Mr. Hizer executed the election form opting $100,000 of coverage and delivered it to either his foreman or the GM! insurance department on July 29, 1988. He later received the contract of insurance.
Mr. Hizer died suddenly on August 24, *1988. Mrs. Hizer filed a claim for the proceeds of the optional coverage on September 19, 1988. MetLife denied the claim, stating that because it had not received the election form until August 2, 1988, coverage did not commence until September 1, 1988 (ie., the first month after the month in which the election form was received). Mrs. Hizer filed suit against the defendants in state court claiming entitlement to the insurance proceeds. Defendant MetLife removed the action to federal court in Hizer v. General Motors Corp., No. IP 91-123-C (S.D.Ind.). Defendants filed a motion for summary judgment, based on plaintiffs failure to exhaust administrative review procedures. The parties then agreed to stay the action while Mrs. Hizer submitted her claim to MetLife for further administrative review. In that review, concluded on April 27, 1993, MetLife found that Mr. Hizer may have submitted his enrollment form to his foreman before the August 1, 1988, deadline required for the coverage to be in effect at his death. Met-Life therefore decided to honor Mrs. Hizer’s claim.
On May 19, 1993, MetLife tendered a check to Mrs. Hizer in the amount of $111,-999.74, which included $100,000 in benefits under the policy plus interest. Athough Mr. Hizer had died nearly five years earlier, Met-Life calculated the interest as six percent per annum multiplied by the amount of the proceeds for a period of only two years, or $11,999.74. Mrs. Hizer, not satisfied with the interest calculation, filed a motion for summary judgment requesting a greater amount of interest based on Ind.Code § 24-4.6-1-103, which provides for interest at the rate of eight percent from the date of settlement on money due on most written instruments not specifying a rate of interest. 2 Judge Tinder dismissed the action on the ground that Mrs. Hizer’s only remaining claim, for additional interest under ERISA, was premature because she had not exhausted her administrative remedies. 3 Judge Tinder did not rule on Mrs. Hizer’s motion because the summary judgment for the defendants had mooted the issue. That decision on summary judgment is final and has not been appealed.
(a) From the date of settlement on money due on any instrument in writing which does not specify a rate of interest and which is not covered by IC 1971, 24 — 4.5 or this article; (b) And from the date an itemized bill shall have been rendered and payment demanded on an account stated, account closed or for money had and received for the use of another and retained without his consent. Ind.Code § 24-4.6-1-103.
After further administrative review of Mrs. Hizer’s claim for additional interest, MetLife rejected the claim. Mrs. Hizer filed the present action on January 25, 1994, seeking an award of interest on the insurance proceeds at the rate of eight percent, again relying on Ind.Code § 24-4.6-1-103. Mrs. Hizer seeks to invoke this court’s federal question jurisdiction under ERISA, 29 U.S.C. § 1132(e). She also seeks attorneys fees.
The plan documents applicable to this life insurance policy are silent as to the payment of interest on benefits claimed and awarded. Defendants say, however, it is “customary” for them to pay delayed settlement interest on GM benefits in accordance with the General Motors claims manual. The claims manual says that six percent interest will be paid from the insured’s death, but “generally” for no more than two years. Mrs. Hizer does not dispute that point as a factual matter, but bases her claim on Ind.Code § 24 — 4.6-1-103, which requires payment of interest on money due pursuant to a written instrument. She argues that the state statute requires the interest to be paid at an annual rate of eight *1458 percent where the instrument is silent as to interest, and that the statute applies to defendants. Thus, Mrs. Hizer claims she is entitled to the difference between the interest defendants actually paid her on May 19, 1993, and the interest that would have accrued by that time had it been calculated at eight percent, plus interest since May 19, ■ 1993, on that difference.
Summary Judgment Standard
Summary judgment should be granted when there is no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
E.g., Glass v. Dachel,
The Merits
The parties’ motions raise several questions about the relationship between ERISA and state law concerning interest payable on monetary obligations, and the scope of federal question jurisdiction under ERISA. The questions are significant in cases like this one, where substantial plan benefits are not paid until long after payment was due. As discussed below, the court concludes first that it has subject matter jurisdiction over this case because ERISA preempts the Indiana statute that would otherwise control the interest due on delayed payment of benefits under an ERISA plan. Next, the court recognizes under the common law of ERISA a right to payment of interest on delayed payments of benefits. Third, the court holds that, under controlling Seventh Circuit reasoning, interest for delayed payment of ERISA benefits should be calculated using market interest rates, such as the prime rate. Fourth, the court finds that plaintiff should be entitled to a market rate of interest in this case beginning thirty days after she submitted her original claim. Finally, the court determines that Mrs. Hizer should be awarded attorneys fees under ERISA.
Subject Matter Jurisdiction and Preemption: This court must first consider whether plaintiffs claim for additional interest arises under federal law. If it does not, the case must be dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. Plaintiffs claim must be that she is seeking an ERISA benefit — otherwise, the court has no jurisdiction. However, she contends that the measure of that benefit is controlled by an Indiana statute. She further contends that ERISA does not preempt the state statute. See 29 U.S.C. § 1144(a) (ERISA preempts “any and all State laws insofar as they ... relate to an employee benefit plan ... ”). The jurisdictional question is how plaintiffs claim for benefits based on an Indiana statute can arise under federal law. The answer is that her claim necessarily arises under federal law, and that the state statute is preempted.
Mrs. Hizer relies on
Estate of Pierson by Ewbank v. Pierson,
As in this ease, the only question before the court in Pierson (at the time of that *1459 court’s decision) was the plaintiffs claim for interest. In Pierson, the underlying benefit question was resolved by settlement. Here it was resolved by Mrs. Hizer’s (apparent) acceptance of payment of the principal and part of the interest she claims. In neither ^sase did a court enter a judgment for the underlying benefit. However, there is one important difference between the two cases. Prior to the partial settlement in Pierson, the plaintiffs entitlement to the underlying benefit had been before the court. That claim, plainly governed by ERISA, gave the Pierson court subject matter jurisdiction over the action independent of its decision on the interest issue. In this case, however, plaintiffs only claim is her claim for interest. Her claim for the underlying benefit was part of her first action, which Judge Tinder dismissed, but it has never been part of this action. Even if ERISA does not preempt a claim for interest based on the Indiana statute, as Pierson holds, Mrs. Hizer cannot logically assert both that this court has subject matter jurisdiction and that the Indiana law is not preempted. This court has subject matter jurisdiction to render a decision on the merits of her claim for interest if, and only if, the Indiana statute is preempted as applied to her claim.
ERISA has a wide preemptive scope. Any state law that “relates to” an employee benefit plan is preempted by ERISA. 29 U.S.C. § 1144(a). The Supreme Court recently described this text as “expansive,” yet “unhelpful” in determining which state laws are preempted.
New York State Conference of Blue Cross & Blue Shield Plans v. Travelers Ins. Co.,
— U.S. -, -,
Under these standards, Ind.Code § 24-4.6-1-103 “relates to” covered plans and is preempted as applied here. True, it is a law with general application to a wide variety of obligations to pay money. However, this court does not believe that such a general statute governing interest payable when benefit payments are delayed is properly described as having only “tenuous, remote, or peripheral connection” with covered plans. What employee benefit plans do is pay money. That is their principal function. Given the time value of money, a material term of any obligation to pay money is the time the payment must be made. That material term is meaningless if there are no legal sanctions for failure to make payment on time. As applied to employee benefit plans, those sanctions are exactly the subject covered by Ind.Code § 24-4.6-1-103.
ERISA’s focus on uniformity in administration also supports preemption here. Payment of interest on benefits is obviously a significant issue for the administration of an employee benefit plan. If interest payments are governed by state law, the result is a lack of uniformity in administration and payment of benefits.
*1460 Also weighing in favor of preemption here is the fact that state laws on the subject of interest could interfere so easily with federal law and policy. Of course, ERISA preemption is not limited to state laws that are deemed inconsistent with federal law and policy, but to illustrate the importance of the preemption issue, suppose that the Indiana statute provided for an annual interest rate of one percent, or twenty percent. As applied to employee benefit plans, one percent interest would obviously be below fair compensation for the time value of money, and (at least under recent market conditions) twenty percent would be so far above fair compensation as to be punitive. The incentives and distortions created by rates too high or too low support the conclusion that the Indiana statute here is sufficiently connected to employee benefit plans to be preempted as applied to plans’ obligations to pay benefits.
Preemption is further supported by the well-established principle that suits brought by beneficiaries or participants asserting “improper processing of claims under ERISA-regulated plans be treated as federal questions....”
Pilot Life Ins. Co. v. Dedeaux,
If Mi's. Hizer’s claim were brought “pursuant to” the Indiana statute itself, the claim would be preempted by ERISA, in which case Mrs. Hizer could amend her complaint to state a claim under the common law of ERISA. But if ERISA did not preempt her claim under the Indiana statute, this court would be forced to dismiss her complaint for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
See UIU Severance Pay Trust Fund v. Local Union No. 18-U, United Steelworkers of America,
ERISA Provides a Right to Interest for Delayed Payment of Benefits:
The fact that this court has subject matter jurisdiction does not mean Mrs. Hizer has stated a claim under ERISA. ERISA may preempt state law without providing a comparable remedy.
E.g., Thomason v. Aetna Life Ins. Co.,
In the absence of a federal statute or persuasive precedent on a claim for interest for delayed payment, the law of prejudgment interest on ERISA claims provides helpful guidance on this issue. The Seventh Circuit holds that prejudgment interest is presumptively available in cases where judgment has been rendered pursuant to federal law.
Gorenstein Enterprises, Inc. v. Quality Care-USA Inc.,
Defendants argue vigorously that ERISA should not recognize a right to interest on delayed payment of benefits. They note that ERISA’s statutory language says nothing explicit about such interest, and they rely on the broad principle that “extracontractual” remedies are not available in claims for ERISA benefits.
See Pilot Life Ins. Co. v. Dedeaux,
In recent years, however, the Seventh Circuit, among others, has established the presumption that prejudgment interest should ordinarily be awarded in cases seeking payment of ERISA benefits. An award of interest for delayed payment of benefits is no more “extracontractual” than an award of prejudgment interest. In both cases, the interest is an essential element of complete relief for breach of an obligation to pay benefits. See generally Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 354 and cmt. c (1979) (unless otherwise agreed, interest is always recoverable for the non-payment of money once payment has become due and there is a breach). Defendants offer no rationale for drawing a distinction between prejudgment interest and interest on delayed payments, and none is apparent. This court therefore disagrees with Scott on this question of interest.
The same considerations that require payment of prejudgment interest in ERISA cases also weigh in favor of a right to interest on erroneously delayed payments. Prom a participant’s or beneficiary’s viewpoint, the principal duty of the benefit plan is to pay benefits. If payments are not timely paid, they will not serve their purpose. Without a right to interest for erroneously delayed payments, participants and beneficiaries will not receive the full benefits they are entitled to receive. Moreover, the absence of a right to interest would create an incentive for benefit plans to delay payments and to retain for the plan the interest earned on the money that should have been paid to the participant or beneficiary.
*1462
When a benefit has been erroneously denied or delayed, there is no reason why the legal entitlement to interest should depend on whether the claimant has actually won a judgment or even filed suit. Under the common law, when a party breaches a contractual payment obligation, interest is ordinarily required from the date payment was actually due.
See Restatement (Second) of Contracts
§§ 354 and cmt. c (1979);
Moffett v. Gene B. Glick Co., Inc.,
This court therefore holds that a claimant for payment of benefits under an ERISA plan is entitled under ERISA to payment of interest for erroneous delay in payment of the benefits. This result is in accord with the principle that interest for delay in payment of a benefit is compensatory in nature. Plans should not be unjustly enriched any more where there is no judgment on entitlement to the underlying benefit than where there is such a judgment.
See Rivera,
Calculation of Interest Rate Under ERISA: Having found that a beneficiary may state a claim under ERISA for delayed payment interest, the question is how to calculate a plan administrator’s interest obligation. The plan documents in this case are silent on the issue. Defendants argue that if this court decides Mrs. Hizer is entitled to interest, then it should be limited to that interest they already paid her. MetLife paid Mrs. Hizer two years of interest at six percent, stating that this was the “customary” award in claims of this kind. Defendants introduce an affidavit of a MetLife Claims Supervisor from the record of the Pierson case to support their asserted custom. Defendants also point to the GM claims manual, which states that death benefits should include interest paid from the date of death, but “generally not ... for periods in excess of two years____” Defendants do not argue, however, that MetLife’s custom and GM’s claims manual were part of the benefit plan. Therefore, the payment terms of the custom and claims manual are not controlling here.
As discussed above with regard to jurisdiction, plaintiff argues that Ind.Code § 24-4.6-1-103 governs the interest calculation, but that statute is preempted by ERISA in its application here. To the extent that
Estate of Pierson by Ewbank v. Pierson
is inconsistent with that proposition, this court disagrees, especially in view of more recent case law giving broad reach to ERISA’s preemption clause at least -with respect to state laws that affect so directly the payment of benefits and that may interfere with the uniform administration of plans.
See, e.g., Franklin H. Williams Ins. Trust v. Travelers Ins. Co.,
Just as ease law dealing with prejudgment interest provided guidance as to whether interest on delayed payments is available at all, it also provides guidance in calculating that interest. Awarding prejudgment interest is not simply a matter of statutory application, unlike postjudgment interest under federal law.
See Student Loan Marketing Ass’n v. Lipman,
Plaintiff argues that even if the Indiana statute is preempted, this court should “borrow” the statutory rate because federal law does not specify a rate to be used in calculating prejudgment interest. Several. courts have taken that approach under ERISA and other federal laws.
See Biava v. Insurers Administrative Corp.,
The Seventh Circuit has followed a different course. While it has stated that district courts should have some discretion in determining the rate of prejudgment interest,
Gorenstein,
Use of the prime rate fits the rationale for awarding prejudgment interest in the first place. Prejudgment interest is “an element of complete compensation.”
Amoco Cadiz,
The Seventh Circuit appears not to have addressed specifically the reasoning of the line of eases that look to state law to determine the rate of prejudgment interest to be applied under federal common law, but those cases contradict the principles the Seventh Circuit follows. Where a rate fixed by statute results in underpayment, the policy of providing adequate compensation to ERISA claimants is undermined.
See, e.g., Amoco Cadiz,
*1464 Prejudgment interest under ERISA is a matter of federal law. The Seventh Circuit’s rationale for calculating prejudgment interest precludes reliance on state statutes that fix a rate of interest that cannot adjust to different financial market conditions. Seventh Circuit law requires instead calculation by reference to the prime rate or some other measure of market interest rates during relevant time periods. This court can see no reason why the Seventh Circuit’s principles for calculating prejudgment interest based on market rates do not apply with equal force to interest for delay in payment. 8
Plaintiff is Entitled to Interest from October 19,1988: Plaintiff is entitled to interest at market rates for the long-delayed payment of the insurance proceeds. It remains to be determined when that interest began to accrue. Several choices are available. They include the date of the insured’s death, the date plaintiff submitted her initial claim for benefits, a reasonable time (say 30 or 60 days) after she submitted that claim, the day the insurer initially denied the claim, the date plaintiff submitted her request for review of the denial, a reasonable time after that date, or the date plaintiff exhausted her administrative review. There are arguments and legal authority available to support each of these possibilities.
The central governing principle here is that interest — whether prejudgment or interest on delayed payment — begins to run from the time payment is due under the governing contract.
Restatement (Second) of Contracts
§§ 354 and cmt. c (1979) (interest recoverable from time for performance);
Moffett,
The contract of insurance does not state explicitly when payment shall be due after the insured dies. Plaintiffs Exhibit C at 11, 15. The parties have not called to the court’s attention any uniform or general rule of common law for interpreting the life insurance contract on this issue. As a practical matter, however, one cannot reasonably expect payment on a life insurance policy until a reasonable period after the insurer receives an initial claim giving notice of the death of the insured. In the absence of clearer language in the contract, this court will award plaintiff interest from October 19, 1988, which was one month after she gave defendants notice of her claim.
See generally Connecticut General Life Ins. Co. of New York v. Cole,
It may be helpful to explain briefly why both parties’ positions on this issue have been rejected. Defendants argue that if any interest is awarded, it should begin to accrue no earlier than April 27, 1993, when plaintiff finally completed her partially successful trip through their administrative review procedures. As defendants point out, plaintiffs claim for interest was not ripe for adjudication'in court before that time. However, she was legally entitled to payment under the contract of insurance long before then. The general rule, as noted, is that interest runs from the time the payment should have been made under the contract. In addition, defendants’ approach would merely reward insurers who stretch out the review procedures to unreasonable lengths.
*1465
In arguing against plaintiffs claim for interest, defendants seem to think an interest award would punish them. They have argued strenuously that the original delay was plaintiffs fault because she failed to give them information sooner to show exactly when and how her husband had submitted his application for the insurance and because she failed to invoke the proper procedures for administrative review of the initial denial. The record shows that after Mr. Hizer died, information about his insurance application was in the defendants’ hands, not the plaintiffs. However, the debate over the reasons for defendants’ long delay in payment does not matter for purposes of the interest calculation. The Seventh Circuit has made clear that interest for delayed payment of ERISA benefits is not punishment. It is merely an essential element of complete compensation to account for the time value of money.
Rivera,
Plaintiffs argument for interest from the date of her husband’s death is stronger. Upon his death, her right to the principal payment came into legal existence. In addition, defendants’ claims manual says that their customary practice is to pay interest from the date of the insured’s death. The problem is that the manual is not part of the governing plan documents, nor is there any indication that the insured would have received a copy of the manual, let alone relied on it.
Cf. Ryan v. Chromalloy American Corp.,
The Seventh Circuit has instructed that in awarding prejudgment interest, courts should apply the prime interest rate and should compound the interest.
Amoco Cadiz,
Based on the calculation set out in the appendix to this entry, the court finds that defendants owe Mrs. Hizer $40,551.84 in delayed payment interest. This includes all interest accrued up to the date of this opinion.
Attorneys Fees:
Mrs. Hizer has also requested an award of attorneys fees. Under ERISA, the court has discretion to award attorneys fees to a prevailing plaintiff. 29 U.S.C. § 1132(g). The Seventh Circuit has instructed district courts to apply a five-factor test in deciding whether to award fees to plaintiffs who prevail under ERISA.
Jo
*1466
nowski v. International Brotherhood of Teamsters Local 710,
(1) the degree of the offending parties’ culpability or bad faith; (2) the degree of the ability of the offending parties to satisfy personally an award of attorneys’ fees; (3) whether or not an award of attorneys’ fees against the offending parties would deter other persons acting under similar circumstances; (4) the amount of benefit conferred on members of the pension plan as a whole; and (5) the relative merits of the parties’ positions.
Janowski,
The first factor does not weigh in favor of a fee award here, for there is no indication of bad faith on the part of the defendants. There is no evidence that Met-Life acted in bad faith when it denied Mrs. Hizer’s claim initially, and it ultimately agreed to process her claim again, awarding her the benefit she sought and some interest. The defendants disputed the amount of interest owed, and their position, although deemed incorrect by this court, was not in bad faith.
The remaining factors under
Janowski
all weigh in favor of a fee award. The second factor weighs in favor of a fee award, for the defendants should be able to afford the fee award here. The third factor weighs in favor of a fee award, for there is a deterrent value to allowing fees where a plan administrator does not provide all the interest necessary to make the beneficiary whole. One reason for awarding prejudgment and delayed payment interest in ERISA eases is to place an incentive on plans to compensate participants and beneficiaries fully. An award of attorneys fees in such a case also gives an incentive to plan administrators to at least attempt to make participants and beneficiaries whole. Here, MetLife awarded a sum of interest arbitrarily, without regard to the actual period of accrual for which Mrs. Hizer deserved to be made whole. The defendant’s resistance over years of litigation has imposed costs on Mrs. Hizer that appear to exceed the interest actually in dispute.
See Brewer v. Protexall, Inc.,
The fourth Janowski factor is focused on pension plans, but Mrs. Hizer’s suit should benefit other beneficiaries, and will not come at their expense. In many cases where an individual seeks a benefit under an employee welfare benefit plan, the stakes are too small to make litigation economically rational without the prospect of a fee award. That is even more likely to be true where the participant or beneficiary seeks only interest on late payment of a benefit. Here, Mrs. Hizer’s suit and the resulting development of the federal common law of ERISA should aid other participants and beneficiaries of this plan and other employer-sponsored welfare benefit plans to determine their rights to interest on plan benefits. Thus, the fourth factor also weighs heavily in favor of a fee award. The fifth Janowski factor also weighs in favor of a fee award. Defendants should have known that prejudgment interest is presumptively available in ERISA cases to provide complete remedies, and they have stubbornly resisted Mrs. Hizer’s claims at almost every step for more than five years. While the court does not find that defendants have acted in bad faith, they also have offered no argument to support their conclusion that interest on delayed payments should be treated differently from prejudgment interest. On balance, therefore, after considering each of these factors, this court believes it should exercise its discretion to allow a fee award here.
CONCLUSION
Plaintiffs motion for partial summary judgment is granted and defendants’ motion for summary judgment is denied in all respects. The court will enter final judgment in favor of Mrs. Hizer in the amount of *1467 $40,551.84, and will award attorneys fees when the parties complete their submission of evidence on the appropriate amount.
So ordered,
Appendix
Beginning Date Ending Date Interest Period Interest Rate Periodic Interest Accum. Interest Compounded Principal
10/19/88 11/27/88 40 days 10.00% $1,095.89 $ 1,095.89 $100,000.00
11/28/88 2/9/89 74 days 10.50 2,128.76 3,224.65 100,000.00
2/10/89 2/23/89 14 days 11.00 421.92 3,646.57 100,000.00
2/24/89 6/4/89 101 days 11.50 3.182.19 6,828.76 100,000.00
6/5/89 7/30/89 56 days 11.00 1,687.67 8,516.43 100,000.00
7/31/89 10/18/89 80 days 10.50 2.301.37 10,817.80 100,000.00
10/19/89 1/7/90 81 days 10.50 2,582.21 13,400.01 110.817.80
1/8/90 10/18/90 284 days 10.00 8,622.54 22.022.55 110.817.80
10/19/90 1/191 75 days 10.00 2,507.31 24,529.86 122.022.55
1/2/91 9/15/91 257 days 9.50 8,162.14 32,692.00 122.022.55
9/16/91 10/18/91 33 days 8.00 882.57 33.574.57 122.022.55
10/19/91 11/5/91 18 days 8.00 526.98 34.101.55 133.574.57
11/6/91 12/22/91 47 days 7.50 1,290.00 35.591.55 133.574.57
12/23/91 7/1/92 191 days 6.50 4.543.37 39,934.92 133.574.57
7/2/92 10/18/92 109 days 6.00 2,393.36 42,328.28 133.574.57
10/19/92 5/19/93 213 days 6.00 4,983.44 47,311.72 142,328.28
5/20/93 10/18/93 152 days 6.00 757.80 36,069.78 30,328.54 9
10/19/93 3/22/94 155 days 6.00 919.40 36,988.82 36.069.78
3/23/94 4/18/94 27 days 6.25 166.76 37.155.58 36.069.78
4/19/94 5/16/94 28 days 6.75 186.77 37,342.35 36.069.78
5/17/94 8/16/94 92 days 7.25 659.14 38,001.49 36.069.78
8/17/94 10/18/94 63 days 7.75 482.50 38,483.99 36.069.78
10/19/94 11/14/94 27 days 7.75 220.62 38,704.61 38.483.99
11/15/94 1/31/95 78 days 8.50 699.04 39,403.65 38.483.99
2/1/95 6/1/95 121 days 9.00 1.148.19 40,551.84 38.483.99
Notes
. Defendant Allison Engine Company, which recently purchased the Allison Gas Turbine Division from General Motors, was dismissed from this action on March 10, 1995, by stipulation of the parties.
. Interest at the rate of eight percent (8%) per annum shall be allowed:
. Judge Tinder held that the plan rules required further administrative review of the claim because Mrs. Hizer was disputing the sufficiency of a benefit award. Mrs. Hizer had filed «mother claim for review with MetLife based on her claim of insufficient interest. However, because Met-Life had not yet completed review of her claim at the time of Judge Tinder’s ruling, Judge Tinder dismissed the action.
. Hizer argues that
Pierson
collaterally estops defendants from litigating the question of her entitlement to interest under the Indiana statute because it was a final judgment on nearly identical facts involving the same defendants present in this action. The Supreme Court in
Parklane Hosiery Co., Inc. v. Shore,
. The courts are to develop and apply a federal common law of contracts to govern rights and obligations under employee benefit plans subject to ERISA.
See Pilot Life Ins. Co. v. Dedeaux,
. Under the regulations governing ERISA, the plan administrator must process the initial claim within a "reasonable” time from the date the claim is made. 29 C.F.R. § 2560.503-l(e)(l). If the claim is denied and review is requested, the decision on review must ordinarily occur within 60 days to be reasonable. 29 C.F.R. § 2560.503-1(h). However, where the employee benefit plan is established and maintained pursuant to a collective bargaining agreement, as GM’s plan is here, the agreement controls the reasonableness of claim and review procedures through grievance and arbitration mechanisms. 29 C.F.R. § 2560.503-l(a)(2).
. The logic of the cases that look to state law for the calculation of prejudgment interest may be flawed for another reason. The line of cases cited above can ultimately be traced to
Dependahl v. Falstaff Brewing Corp.,
. Although not presented here, this analysis raises a practical question that could be important to many plans: May benefit plans enforce plan provisions that establish the interest rate or a method of calculation for delay in payment of benefits? Generally, participants and beneficiaries of ERISA plans will have no ability to bargain over plan terms. It would defeat the policies of ERISA, for example, to allow a plan sponsor to imbed in a plan an artificially low interest rate for delay in payment of benefits. However, the law usually favors a contractual solution over a judicial one. As long as plans adopt a reasonable way to calculate the interest, i.e., one that comports with the Seventh Circuit's methodology in prejudgment interest cases, then it appears the plan terms should control the precise details of the calculation.
. On May 19, 1993, defendants distributed $111,-999.74 to Mrs. Hizer, $11,999.74 of which was for interest.
