This is a suit for benefits under an employee welfare plan, with an alternative claim for breach of contract. The district judge held that the alternative claim was preempted and that the plaintiffs had no rights under ERISA, and he therefore granted summary judgment for the defendants and dismissed the suit.
Joseph Miller became the president of the principal defendant, Taylor Insulation Company, in 1973, and later the chairman of the board, the position that he held when he retired in 1979, at which time the company’s chief executive officer was Jon Nelson, the other defendant. Upon retiring, Miller entered into a ten-year “Consultation and Non-Competition Agreement” with the company. The agreement provided, among other things, that “Miller shall also be entitled to participate in the sick-pay plan, the medical reimbursement plan and the group life insurance plan, which is currently effective and which has been authorized and adopted by Taylor.” All these wеre plans in which Miller had participated as an employee up to the date of his retirement. The medical reimbursement plan is the one in issue. It was an insured plan that provided benefits to full-time employees and their beneficiaries. The insurance company listed Miller and his family as being covered by the рolicy that it had issued to Taylor.
In 1980 Taylor switched insurance companies without altering benefits. The new insurance company continued to list Miller and his family as enrolled for coverage; and between 1979 and 1987 Taylor reimbursed Miller and his family for various medical expenses. But in the latter year, with two years of the Consultation and Non-Competition Agreement still to go, Taylor, in search of lower premiums, again switched insurance companies. The new company delisted Miller and his family, since the policy provided — as had its predecessors — that coverage was limited to full-time employees, which Miller had ceased to be whеn he retired. Nelson told Miller that he was no longer a participant in the medical reimbursement plan, and this suit ensued.
The medical reimbursement plan was an ERISA plan but Miller argues that if he is not a plan participant ERISA is inapplicable and he can sue Taylor for breach of contract, since Taylor prоmised him in the Consultation and Non-Competition Agree
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ment that he could participate in the plan. The argument is unsound. ERISA preempts state law, including common law, that relates to an ERISA plan. 29 U.S.C. § 1144(a). There is no doubt that the medical reimbursement plan maintained by Taylor is an ERISA plan, 29 U.S.C. § 1002(1);
Ed Miniat, Inc. v. Globe Life Ins. Group, Inc.,
So Miller cannot rely on any claim of breach of contract that he might, were it not for ERISA’s preemption provision, have against Taylor. His only possible claim is an ERISA claim. As to that, Taylor’s (and Nelson’s) defense is simply that the terms of the medical reimbursement plan were stated in the successive insurance policies, which are materially identical, and that under those terms Miller was not eligible to participate in the plan, because he was not a full-time employee. End of case.
Not so fast. First of all, Taylоr may be estopped to deny that Miller is a participant. Nelson himself conceded that the only possible interpretation of the Consultation and Non-Competition Agreement is that in it Taylor promised Miller that he would be a participant in the medical reimbursement plan (presumably — this has not been made аn issue either — until the agreement expired). This was not a promise of any particular level of benefits, or a promise to waive the limitations applicable to other participants, such as an exclusion of benefits for preexisting conditions. It was a promise to treat Miller like the other participants. The promise would be entirely hollow if Miller were excluded from all possibility of receiving benefits simply because he was not a full-time employee. He was retiring, ceasing to be a full-time employee, with no expectation of resuming full-time employment. And everyone knew this. The agreement promised him cоverage regardless. So, if, as turned out to be the case, the insurance policy did not cover Miller, it became Taylor’s duty either to obtain an amendment to the policy or to pay any benefits that might be due under the terms governing entitlement (other than the status of being a full-time employee) itself.
Promissory estoppel is, in the view of this circuit at any rate, a part of the common law that we have been told (for example in
Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v. Bruch,
Granted, promissory estoppel may not have as long a reach in an ERISA case as in an ordinary breach of contract case. Conceivably the policy against oral modifications of ERISA plans, on which see
Schoonmaker v. Employee Savings Plan,
A promise, however, does not by itself a promissory estoppel make. The promisee must rely to his detriment, and his reliance must be reasonable (another reason why a person made ineligible by ERISA to participate in an ERISA plan could not invoke promissory estoppel to shoehorn his way into onе).
Black v. TIC Investment Corp., supra,
He has another string to his bow. He argues that if, he was not a participant in the Taylor employee welfare plan by virtue of the doctrine of promissory estoppel, he was a, or rаther the, participant in another plan—a one-man employee welfare plan created by Taylor in the provision that we quoted from the Consultation and Non-Competi
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tion Agreement. There are no particular formalities that a plan must comply with to be an ERISA welfare plan. It need not evеn be in writing; although its administrators have a fiduciary duty to reduce it to writing, 29 U.S.C. §§ 1022(b), 1102(a)(1), this is not a prerequisite to coverage.
Scott v. Gulf Oil Corp., supra,
But even if this is a valid theory of ERISA entitlement, cf.
Modzelewski v. Resolution Trust Corp.,
A better name for this defense than mutual mistake is that there was а latent ambiguity in the contract. The parties thought they were negotiating over insurance; there was no insurance. It is like the famous ease of the two ships named
Peerless,
where one party to the contract thought the contract was about one of the ships and the other thought it was about the other, so that neither thоught the contract ambiguous, but of course it was once one dug beneath the surface.
Raffles v. Wichelhaus,
2 H. & C. 906, 159 Eng.Rep. 375 (Ex. 1864). We took a tour of this curious corner of the law of contracts recently, and will not repeat it here.
Colfax Envelope Corp. v. Local No. 458-3M, Chicago Graphic Communications International Union,
The idea that Taylor violated a “one man” plan the full contents of which was a promise to pay Miller for certain medical еxpenses *761 specified in another document (the successive insurance policies) troubles us, though. It seems to be just a roundabout way of saying that Taylor broke a promise to Miller and must make good, and thus makes the case sound like a breach of contract suit after all — yet we said that Miller’s contract сlaim was preempted by ERISA, and that recast as 'an ERISA claim he would have to show that the doctrine of promissory estoppel could be applied without violating ERISA. It seems odd, in fact formalistic in the worst sense, to make the issue of promissory estoppel evaporate by saying that Miller is not asserting a сlaim under an ERISA plan that on its face excludes him, but is asserting a claim under another plan, a one-man ERISA plan which has the happy property for him of being identical to the plan that he cannot establish his right to participate in without establishing the consistency of promissory estoppel with ERISA, but which does not rеquire that he invoke promissory estoppel at all.
Surely what is going on here is that Miller is complaining that Taylor broke its promise to make him a participant in the plan. To redescribe the promise as a “one man” plan is to evade the issue whether the enforcement of a promise to make а person a participant exceeds the permissible scope of the doctrine of promissory estoppel in an ERISA plan. We think the redeseription is improper, but we have already said that we think the doctrine does stretch as far as Miller needs to prevail, provided he can show reliance both actual and reasonable on the promise.
We apologize for the tedium of our analysis and exposition. Unfortunately ERISA, a statute primarily concerned with guaranteeing pension benefits, has with little forethought as far as we can see taken a large class of simple contract cases, involving claims against unfunded employer-administered welfare plans, dumped them into federal court, and made their resolution complicated and uncertain by subjecting them to both federal statutory and federal common law.
The judgment is affirmed insofar as it dismisses the contract claim but is reversed with respect to the ERISA claims, and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Affirmed in Pakt, Reversed in Part, AND Remanded.
