I
A
In 2005, Delta Airlines, Inc. ("Delta") filed for bankruptcy and stopped contributing
Title IV of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA),
When a plan terminates without enough funding to provide even the guaranteed benefits established by Title IV, a statutory trustee collects the plan's remaining assets and begins making promised payments according to a list of statutory priorities. See
The Corporation determined the Delta Plan had a deficit of over $2.5 billion in unfunded benefits when it terminated, almost $800 million of which were guaranteed under Title IV. Actuarial Case Memo for Delta Pilots Retirement Plan (Mar. 24, 2010), J.A. 201-03. Based on this information, the Corporation began paying estimated
B
Nearly 1,700 pilots in the Delta Plan or their beneficiaries sued the Corporation to further challenge their benefit determinatiоns, assert violations of the Administrative Procedure Act,
The Corporation moved to dismiss the breach of fiduciary duty claim on numerous grounds, including that
The district court denied the Corporation's motion to dismiss and its subsequent motion for reconsideration. Lewis v. PBGC ,
However, the district court concluded that "the dearth of controlling precedent that supports the Court's determination regarding the fiduciary breach claim, coupled with the Corporation's credible contention that ... ERISA does not permit the plaintiffs to pursue this claim, raise[s] a controlling question of law as to which
The district court has jurisdiction over this case pursuant to § 1303(f), and we have jurisdiction under
II
A
We begin by examining the text of § 1344(c), which provides in full:
Any increase or decrease in the value of the assets of a single-employer plan occurring during the period beginning on the later of (1) thе date a trustee is appointed under section 1342(b) of this title or (2) the date on which the plan is terminated is to be allocated between the plan and the [C]orporation in the manner determined by the court (in the case of a court-appointed trustee) or as agreed upon by the [C]orporation and the plan administrator in any other case. Any increase or decrease in the value of the assets of a single-employer plan occurring after the date on which the plan is terminated shall be credited to, or suffered by, the [C]orporation.
The two halves of this subsection are in tension. The first half of § 1344(c) explains that any change in the value of plan assets occurring after "a trustee is appointed under § 1342(b)" or "the plan is terminated," whichever comes later, should be allocated "in a manner determined by the court (in the case of a court-appointed trustee) or as agreed upon by the [C]orporation and the plan administrator." This seems to conflict with the second, italicized half of § 1344(c), which clearly assigns all post-termination gains and losses to the Corporation. See Kinek v. Paramount Commc'ns, Inc. ,
We need not resolve that conflict here. One of the two events referenced in the first half of § 1344(c) is the appointment of a pre-termination trustee under § 1342(b). See
Moreover, although we do not decide the question, the reference to § 1342(b) suggests the first half of § 1344(c) was meant to govеrn changes in the value of assets pending plan termination, while the second half allocates post-termination gains and losses to the Corporation. The pilots acknowledge as much, explaining that § 1344(c)"is properly treated as a measure giving necessary guidance on the thorny issue of whose accounts are to be 'credited'
Recognizing that § 1342(b) governs the appointment of pre-termination trustees also reveals a potential defect in the first half of § 1344(c) itself. The first half of § 1344(c) applies "on the later of" the appointment of a pre-termination trustee or when the plan terminates. But a pre-termination, statutory trustee will by definition be appointed before plan termination, rendering meaningless the question of which event comes later. This suggests the first half of § 1344(c) contains a drafting error, as both parties agree. See Oral Arg. Tr. at 8-9, 20.
We thus apply the second half of § 1344(c), which by its express terms governs the allocation of post-termination gains аt issue in this case.
B
The Corporation argues that it is entitled under § 1344(c) to any post-termination increase in the value of pension plan assets. In other words, the Corporation reasons, Congress has already decided who benefits or suffers the loss from a change in the value of plan assets once that plan has been terminated. Therefore, the Corporation concludes that the pilots cannot recover that money as equitable relief for an alleged breach of fiduciary duty. We agree.
The Corporation guarantees certain benefits to participants in pension plans. See
The pilots argue that statutory trustees of terminated pension plans have a fiduciary duty to plan participants, and § 1303(f)(1) authorizes "appropriate equitable relief" if that duty is breached. The pilots explain that
According to the pilots, if disgorgement is available as "appropriate equitable relief" under § 1132(a)(3) to prevent the unjust enrichment of fiduciaries of ongoing plans, then the presumption of consistent usage dictates that disgorgement is also "appropriate equitable relief" under § 1303(f)(1) with regard to terminated plans. See Envtl. Def. v. Duke Energy Corp. ,
We are unpersuaded. Section 1344(c) does not apply to ongoing plans so "the presumption of consistent usage 'readily yields' to context." Util. Air Regulatory Grp. v. EPA ,
In addition, ERISA repeatedly qualifies the fiduciary status of post-termination trustees "to the extent that the provisions of [Title IV] are inconsistent" with fiduciary requirements.
The pilots also claim that "duties imposed on the statutory trustee do not fall by the wayside just because the [Corporation], and not a private party, becomes the trustee." Wilmington Shipping Co. v. New Eng. Life Ins. Co. ,
The pilots' request for post-termination investment gains is fundamentally flawed. Because § 1344(c) does not depend on whether the Corporation acts as statutory trustee of the terminated plan, any post-termination change in the value of plan assets must be "credited to, or suffered by" the Corporation in its capacity as guarantor .
Finally, the district court distinguished between assets properly held by the statutory trustee and assets held in breach of a fiduciary duty. Lewis ,
We do not see this distinction in § 1344(c). And "given the express language of the statute" allocating post-termination gains and losses to the Corporation, we decline to create an "implied exception"
This does not mean the pilots lacked possible remedies for their alleged injuries. Both parties agree that other forms of equitable relief are generally available in cases of fiduciary breach, including removal of the Corporation as statutory trustee of the terminated plan. See, e.g. , Pineiro v. PBGC ,
III
We reverse the district court's ruling that disgorgement is an available remedy against the Corporation and we remand to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
So ordered.
Notes
Congress has considered amending § 1344(c). For example, in 1994 the U.S. House of Representatives considered a "clarification" to § 1344(c) as part of a larger bill, amending the subsection to read: "Any increase or decrease in the value of the assets of a single-employer plan occurring during the period beginning on the later of (1) the date a trustee is appointed under section 1342(b) of this title or (2) and ending on the date on which the plan is terminated is to beshall be allocated between the plan and the corporation in the manner determined by the court (in the case of a court-appointed trustee) or as agreed upon by the corporation and the plan administrator in any other case(in any other case) . Any increase or decrease in the value of the assets of a single-employer plan occurring after the date on which the plan is terminated shall be credited to, or suffered by, the corporation." H.R. Rep. No. 103-632, at 204 (Aug. 26, 1994). But the House of Representatives never voted on the proposed bill.
In their petition asking that we amend the opinion, the pilots assert that their amended complaint-specifically, the fiduciary breach claim-seeks remedies in addition to disgorgemеnt, which the pilots hope to pursue on remand. See Pet. 6-11. The Corporation responds that the fiduciary breach claim seeks only disgorgement, the pilots have not pursued additional remedies throughout "multiple years of litigation," and the panel "should not resuscitate the fiduciary breach claim" "for reasons [the pilots] did not advance in the district court." Resp. 2, 8. Our "normal rule" is to avoid passing on an issue that the district court has not fully аddressed, Liberty Prop. Tr. v. Republic Props. Corp. ,
