Lead Opinion
Walter "Wally" Gianino owned and operated a plastering company in St. Louis, Missouri, for over thirty years. That business-Gianino Plastering-abruptly closed in 2012. Around the same time, Wally's son, Curt Gianino, who had worked at Gianino Plastering for over a decade, founded his own company, CWG Plastering, LLC. CWG took on at least some of Gianino Plastering's customers, hired its
That judgment arose out of Gianino Plastering's 2009 collective bargaining agreement with the Operative Plasterers and Cement Masons International Association Local 3 ("the Union"). The agreement obligated the company to make regular contributions to the Indiana State Council of Plasterers and Cement Masons Health and Welfare and Pension Funds ("the Funds"). Gianino Plastering soon fell short of meeting that obligation, prompting the Funds to sue in the Southern District of Indiana in 2011 to recover the delinquent payments. After a bench trial, the district court entered judgment against Gianino Plastering and in favor of the Funds. But the Funds were blocked from collecting on their judgment because Gianino Plastering filed for bankruptcy.
The Funds now have sued CWG, asserting that CWG is Gianino Plastering's successor and alter ego and thus liable for both the judgment and for other ongoing violations of the collective bargaining agreement. After discovery, the parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. The district court ruled that the Funds had not produced enough evidence to proceed to trial. Our de novo review of the record convinces us to the contrary: the Funds proffered considerable evidence that a trier of fact could use to support its case against CWG, and so we reverse and remand.
I
The Funds rely on two legal theories to impose liability on CWG for Gianino Plastering's debts and continuing obligations. First, they contend that CWG is a successor to Gianino Plastering, making it liable for Gianino Plastering's failure to pay into the Funds. See, e.g. , Teed v. Thomas & Betts Power Sols., L.L.C. ,
Because CWG's liability arises under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA),
A
Even with the forfeiture, the question remains whether we should, on our own initiative, reject the use of federal law in favor of one or more state laws. We see no reason to do so here. If the choice of federal law appeared to be flatly inconsistent with the Supreme Court's decisions, we would have a different problem. But it is not. To the contrary, the NLRA and
For example, the Supreme Court announced a federal standard for successor liability in a number of cases beginning with John Wiley & Sons, Inc. v. Livingston ,
A federal standard for alter-ego liability also has deep roots in labor law. In Howard Johnson , the Supreme Court held, without even a nod to state law, that federal common law governed the question before it. It then went on to state that under federal law, an "alter ego" (unlike a successor corporation) "is in reality the same employer and is subject to all the legal and contractual obligations of the predecessor."
On the other side of the ledger we have the Supreme Court's decision in Peacock v. Thomas ,
Recognizing that this issue remains open, we nonetheless do not find in Peacock a clear signal undermining the Court's longstanding recognition that cases that do rest on ERISA or Plan language are both within the federal court's subject-matter jurisdiction and typically governed by federal law. In our case, the Funds
B
Both successor and alter-ego liability incorporate a scienter component coupled with an analysis of similarities between the old and new entities. Successor liability requires notice of the obligation by the new entity, while alter-ego liability requires more: a fraudulent intent to avoid collective bargaining obligations. Chi. Truck Drivers, Helpers & Warehouse Workers Union (Indep.) Pension Fund v. Tasemkin, Inc. ,
II
Here, the district court approached the issue by marching through a lengthy list of factors identified in several earlier decisions from this court, including Tasemkin,
Our own review of the evidence presented by the Funds for purposes of the summary judgment motion persuades us that there are striking continuities between Gianino Plastering's operations and the newly-formed CWG. As we noted at the outset, Wally was the sole owner of Gianino Plastering and shuttered the company in 2012; CWG opened within days of Gianino Plastering's closing and was solely owned by Curt. The companies' ownership, name, and address may have changed, but the transition of operations and employees from Gianino Plastering to CWG tells a different story.
The crucial period for analyzing the transition runs from July 27 to August 14. On July 27, the presiding magistrate judge recommended a $196,940.73 judgment against Gianino Plastering after an evidentiary hearing on damages. Wally undisputedly
Meanwhile, Gianino Plastering was at work as a plastering subcontractor on a residential job called the LJPP project. Sometime in late July, Wally and Curt visited the LJPP general contractor and informed him that Gianino Plastering was shutting down but that CWG would honor Gianino Plastering's bid and complete the work. Documents as late as July 30 still listed Gianino Plastering as the plastering subcontractor, yet CWG later accepted a $28,800 payment for work completed through July 31. The subcontract was transferred to CWG on August 17, only three days after its formation. CWG then completed the job in Gianino Plastering's stead.
Gianino Plastering employed four people at the time of its closing: Wally, Curt, Daniel Giger, and James Gildehaus. All but Wally joined CWG's payroll immediately after Gianino Plastering went out of business, presumably while still working on the LJPP project. Curt, Giger, and Gildehaus received their last Gianino Plastering paycheck on August 10, the Friday before the judgment was entered. The next Friday, August 17, Curt and Gildehaus received a CWG paycheck. Gildehaus was aware that he had switched employers because Curt called him and said "Hey, Wally's being sued and I'm starting my own company now and Wally's no longer in the picture." Giger missed a week of pay, receiving his first CWG check on August 24, but he understood that gap to be caused by the Funds' lawsuit against Gianino Plastering. Giger testified that he did not even realize that he was working for a new company. Wally was not formally employed by CWG that year (he began receiving CWG pay in August 2013), but there is evidence that he was involved with the new company in 2012. He signed a lien waiver on behalf of CWG on November 30 and was seen at the LJPP jobsite. In short, a trier of fact could find that CWG adopted Gianino Plastering's workforce as its own after the judgment was entered.
In an attempt to downplay the continuities between the two companies, CWG emphasizes what it sees as major differences between the two entities. It stresses that CWG was solely owned and managed by Curt, while Gianino Plastering was solely owned and managed by Wally. But the Funds have offered evidence undermining this clean distinction. Wally was the sole CWG contact for at least one client; he submitted bids for at least two CWG projects; and he accompanied Curt to meetings early in CWG's existence. Furthermore, "familial control" can be treated as "common ownership and control" in appropriate labor cases. NLRB v. Dane Cnty. Dairy ,
The parties dispute the materiality of CWG's capitalization, common equipment, and shared clients. But the best we can say for CWG is that these disputed items are just that: disputes to be resolved at trial. CWG makes much of Curt's initial financing of CWG with $5,500 of his own money. A more significant source of initial funds, however, was the $28,800 payment that CWG accepted for Gianino Plastering's work on the LJPP project. According to its bank statements, CWG could not have met its obligations for its first month of operation using the $5,500 deposit alone. Similarly, the parties dispute whether it is significant that CWG used Gianino Plastering's trucks. Gianino Plastering sold the
Considered as a whole, the record would allow reasonable factfinders to differ. As to scienter , the Funds have strong evidence of intent and undisputed evidence of knowledge, but a factfinder could choose to believe Curt's account over Gildehaus's. Similarly, the Funds have submitted evidence that could suggest "substantial continuity in the operation of the business," Tasemkin ,
III
Because the Funds have presented sufficient evidence to proceed to trial on both theories, we REVERSE the judgment of the district court and REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Concurrence Opinion
I join fully in Chief Judge Wood's opinion. I write separately to address concerns raised in Judge Easterbrook's opinion concurring in the judgment. The federal rules of successorship liability under ERISA and federal labor law evolved as equitable doctrines to address the common practice of employers trying to sell their businesses so as to avoid their obligations under federal law. In developing those rules, courts have indeed kept an eye on how those rules would likely affect people to alter their decisions in buying and selling businesses or their assets.
That is evident in Indiana Electrical Workers Pension Benefit Fund v. ManWeb Services, Inc. ,
Easterbrook, Circuit Judge, concurring in the judgment.
I agree with my colleagues that the case must be remanded, but I do not agree with them about what ought to happen next. I have reservations about choice of law and the content of federal successorship law to the extent it applies.
Because the Funds seek to recover from CWG Plastering directly under two federal statutes, the district court has subject-matter jurisdiction. It does not follow that federal law applies to all of the Funds' claims. The Funds present two distinct claims: that CWG Plastering is liable in its own right as the successor of Gianino Plastering and that CWG Plastering must pay a judgment the Funds hold against Gianino Plastering. The first claim arises under federal law. But the second sounds like the same sort of theory that Peacock v. Thomas ,
The Funds' direct ERISA claim rests on federal law, but the statute does not supply a rule of decision. We must apply federal common law. What is the source of that law? Sometimes federal common law is drawn from state law. See, e.g., United States v. Kimbell Foods, Inc .,
My colleagues conclude that federal common law creates successorship liability whenever the original and successor businesses are similar enough-where "enough" depends on juggling the many factors a creative legal mind can envision. Maybe so; plenty of judicial opinions proceed that way. My colleagues cite a sample of them. This ambulatory approach confounds businesses by being so vague that it is impossible to know the legal rule until lengthy and expensive suits are over. Cf. Secretary of Labor v. Lauritzen ,
More: it is necessary to ask how this fundamentally ex post perspective affects parties' behavior ex ante . If "similar enough" firms must pay their predecessors' debts, what happens? Will pension funds be the winners? Today's decision for these Funds may come at the expense of all funds tomorrow.
Consider the facts of Indiana Electrical Workers Pension Benefit Fund v. ManWeb Services, Inc. ,
Businesses fail, and leave creditors unpaid, precisely when their assets are worth less than their liabilities. If buying the assets means also accepting the liabilities, then the assets have a negative value and purchases do not occur. When that happens pension and welfare-benefit funds are worse off, losing even an ability to recover the purchase price from investors for their own benefit. Employees and customers also may suffer losses when a business cannot continue under new ownership.
I use the numbers in ManWeb to illustrate a problem, not to reargue the facts of that case. If as Judge Hamilton suggests the purchase price was below the value of the assets, and the buyer's payment was used for the benefit of an inside creditor rather than the fund, the right response should have been a fraudulent-conveyance action, which would have enabled the fund to realize the assets' true value. A successorship judgment requiring the buyer to pay the full amount of the debt, even when that exceeds the assets' net value, is problematic.
Courts should consider how judge-made rules lead people to alter their behavior. We stressed this recently in Illinois Department of Revenue v. Hanmi Bank , No. 17-1575,
What was true in Hanmi Bank is equally true of the Funds' claims. One lawful alternative would have been to have the Funds' claims discharged in bankruptcy. Another would have been a sale of assets in bankruptcy, with liability stripped off under § 363(f) on the same theory as in HanmiBank . The former approach-bankruptcy with no successor-would have been worse for the Funds, the workers, and the customers alike. A sale of assets under § 363(f) also would have left the Funds with nothing. If Curt Gianino had
