OPINION
Though this combined appeal raises detailed questions of secured transactions and employee benefits law, the issue is easily stated. We must decide how to distribute $1.75 million in settlement monies claimed by plaintiffs and a secured creditor and what effect, if any, the fund should have upon the non-settling defendants. In No. 99-3497, Star Bank, as the secured creditor, claims the settlement fund as “proceeds” from its loan to the plan. In No. 00-3461, appellants are the non-settling defendants who continue to object to the form and effect of the settlement.
I. FACTS
In 1987, John Endres decided to sell his interest in Electro-Jet Tool & Manufacturing, an aerospace machine shop that he founded and long managed. After fruitless negotiations with a Canadian firm, he agreed to sell his 82.5% stake in Electro-Jet to the company’s own employees. As part of the transaction, the then-existing profit sharing plan was converted into an employee stock ownership plan (“the ESOP” or “the plan”), as defined in the Employment Retirement Income Security Act of 1974. See 29 U.S.C. § 1107(d)(6). To finance the $12.5 million purchase, the plan contributed $2.3 million of its own pension assets and obtained a non-recourse loan of $10.2 million from Star Bank, then known as The First National Bank of Cincinnati. The bank was secured, among other collateral, by a pledge of 268,000 shares in Electro-Jet, that portion of stock purchased with the loan amount. Star Bank perfected its interest by taking possession of the shares, which apparently it still retains.
Litigation ensued when plaintiffs discovered that the shares they bought were worthless — and, according to plaintiffs,
Plaintiffs assert that they knew none of this. They claim that Endres and the officers of Electro-Jet kept these operating losses secret while negotiating the buyout. They further claim that Star Bank, as former trustee of the plan, failed to investigate or bring any action on behalf of the plaintiffs once the losses were discovered. Plaintiffs sued Endres, Star Bank, and several former Electro-Jet executives for breach of fiduciary duty under ERISA. Endres, in turn, named as third-party defendants his lawyer, Thomas A. Simons, and Simons’ former law firm.
Plaintiffs also sued the professional ad-visors whom the plan retained to structure the transaction. This second set of defendants — collectively, the “settling defendants” — consists of William Kirkham, who represented the plan during the buyout; Kirkham’s firm, Lindhorst & Dreidame; and Gradison & Company, a consulting film that furnished an appraisal of the Electro-Jet stock. Claiming malpractice and misrepresentation under state law, plaintiffs alleged that these legal and financial advisors failed to represent the plan properly by using incomplete apprais-ais and financial reports that did not reveal the extent of Electro-Jet’s losses.
Here, we need not consider the merits of either the ERISA or the malpractice claims. While the former await further proceedings in District Court, the latter eventually settled for $1.75 million. Instead, we narrow our focus to the malpractice settlement fund, whose distribution has been stayed until resolution of this appeal. Our task is twofold: We must decide whether a secured creditor is entitled to the settlement as “proceeds” of a stock pledge and what effect, if any, the settlement should have upon the on-going litigation between plaintiffs and the remaining defendants.
II. SETTLEMENT FUNDS AS PROCEEDS (No. 99-3497)
As secured creditor to the transaction between Electro-Jet and the employee benefit plan, Star Bank took possession of company stock as collateral for its $10.2 million loan. Following plaintiffs’ settlement of the malpractice claims, Star Bank claimed an interest in the resulting fund as proceeds of the pledged stock. The District Court denied the bank’s motion for partial summary judgment on this claim, and this appeal followed. Star Bank argues that the District Court misinterpreted both the stock pledge agreement and Ohio law, which the parties agreed would govern their transaction. We disagree with the bank and affirm the judgment of the District Court.
Under ERISA, Congress sought to protect plan assets by placing narrow restrictions on the types and terms of stock purchase transactions in which plans may engage. See 29 U.S.C. §§ 1106-1108 (prohibiting certain transactions with benefit plans and outlining stringent exemptions). One such limitation circumscribes the plan assets that may be placed at risk as collat
Star Bank briefly argues that the settlement fund can be considered “earnings” attributable to the Electro-Jet stock. This assertion, made without citation or legal support, is not well-taken. The term “earnings” generally describes income obtained from the performance of labor, the provision of services, the sale of goods, or gain from investment. See Black’s Law Dictionary 509 (6th ed.1990). In other words, earnings flow from deliberate and productive use of resources, not, as is alleged in this case, the malfeasance of others. Plaintiffs’ settlement of their malpractice claims clearly does not constitute “earnings” on the stock.
In the alternative, Star Bank argues that the settlement fund constitutes “collateral” to the loan. Although the pledged stock still remains in the bank’s possession, Star Bank contends that its interest in the collateral also reaches any traceable proceeds. Under the Uniform Commercial Code as adopted in Ohio at the time this action was commenced, it is true that an interest secured by collateral continues in any “identifiable proceeds” of that collateral. Ohio Rev.Code § 1309.25(B). The question, then, is one of characterization: whether the settlement fund constitutes proceeds of the stock subject to a continued security interest. Under the version of the statute that governs this case, the term “proceeds”
includes whatever is received upon the sale, exchange, collection, or other disposition of collateral or proceeds. Insurance payable by reason of loss or damage to the collateral is proceeds, except to the extent that it is payable to a person other than a party to the security agreement. Any payments or distributions made with respect to investment property collateral are proceeds.
Ohio Rev.Code § 1309.25(A) (emphasis added). In applying this definition to the facts, we observe that the settlement fund cannot represent “payments or distributions” on investment property for the same reason it cannot be considered “earnings,” as discussed. If Star Bank is to prevail, it must show a “disposition” of the stock from which plaintiffs received the settlement fund.
We agree with the general proposition that a security interest attaches to assets that replace collateral once damaged or destroyed. However, we disagree with the bank’s depiction of the settlement as a disposition of Electro-Jet stock and the resulting fund as the replacement value of the collateral. Simply put, nothing has been replaced. According to the loan agreement, the pledged stock refers only to those shares purchased with the loan, and Star Bank continues to hold these. The settlement has no bearing on the ownership of or rights to the pledged stock. At most, the fund represents a disposition of potential malpractice liability, not of Electro-Jet shares.
In characterizing the settlement as a disposition of collateral, Star Bank overlooks the causal disconnect between the pledged stock and the malpractice claims. The District Court found that the “the actions of L & D [Lindhorst & Dreidame] and Gradison did not diminish the value of the shares of stock. Rather, that stock was effectively worthless when it was purchased and remains so today.” McDannold v. Star Bank,
This distinction is important in light of McGonigle v. Combs, a Ninth Circuit case Star Bank advances in support of its claim.
Plaintiffs’ malpractice case here, in contrast, is bottomed on bad advice rather than diminution of Electro-Jet stock. Here, the “locus of the loss” was not damage to the collateral but rather common law malpractice; the plan was injured not as a purchaser of stock but as a purchaser of professional services. Plaintiffs exchanged their malpractice claims for $1.75 million, leaving unaffected all ownership interest in the pledged stock. We conclude that this fund, not derived from damage to or disposition of collateral, does not constitute proceeds.
III. THE EFFECT OF THE SETTLEMENT UPON THE REMAINING DEFENDANTS (No. 00-3461)
Because plaintiffs brought this case as a derivative action on behalf of themselves and all plan participants, they were required to obtain judicial approval of any settlement. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 23.1. Appellants Star Bank, Endres, and the trustee of the grantor trust in which Endres held his Electro-Jet shares (collectively, the “non-settling defendants”) objected to the settlement in two ways. First, they protested the “bar order” that prevents them from asserting claims against Kirk-ham, Lindhorst & Dreidame, and Gradi-son, the defendants who settled the malpractice suit. The non-settling defendants requested a hearing to assess the fairness of the bar order, which they claimed cut off their right to contribution. The District Court concluded that no hearing was necessary because the non-settling defendants had no right to contribution. J.A. 1151-54. Second, the non-settling defendants argued that their liability should be reduced proportionately, rather than on the pro tanto or dollar-for-dollar basis contained in the agreement. The District Court likewise rejected this argument, explaining that a proportionate allocation of liability was contrary to the joint-and-several design of ERISA. In sum, the District Court concluded that the settlement agreement was fair, reasonable, and adequate as to all parties. McDannold v. Star Bank, No. C-1-94-002,
A. Appellants’ Claimed Right to Contribution
When, as here, a settlement agreement contains a bar order extinguishing possible legal claims of non-settling defendants, the court must conduct an evidentiary fairness hearing to determine whether the settling defendants are paying their fair share of the liability. See, e.g., Cullen v. Riley (In re Masters Mates & Pilots Pension Plan and IRAP Litig.),
The District Court found no right to contribution under either federal or Ohio law. As the appellants have not briefed or otherwise challenged the court’s ruling under Ohio law, we consider their claim to contribution under federal law alone. This is appropriate because the defendants helped structure a transaction that, according to plaintiffs, violated federal law. See Donovan v. Robbins,
At the outset, we note that we are not ruling on an action for contribution against the settling defendants. Instead, we are asked to decide whether such a claim even exists. At present, there is a split in the circuit courts as to whether one ERISA fiduciary may pursue an action for contribution against another fiduciary. Compare Chemung Canal Trust Co. v. Sovran Bank / Maryland,
In short, the District Court premised its ruling on the absence of common liability
In Harris Trust, a unanimous Supreme Court held that a broker-dealer could be liable for its participation in a transaction prohibited by ERISA § 406(a), 29 U.S.C. § 1106(a). There, respondent Salomon Smith Barney sold nearly $21 million in motel properties to an ERISA pension plan. Upon discovery that the real estate interests were nearly worthless, the plan fiduciaries sued Salomon for rescission of the transaction, restitution of the purchase price with interest, and disgorgement of profits made from the use of plan assets. Salomon moved for summary judgment, arguing that ERISA does not provide a cause of action against nonfiduciaries. The Supreme Court disagreed, explaining that § 502(a)(3), one of ERISA’s remedial provisions, “admits of no limit ... on the universe of possible defendants.” Id. at 246. Accordingly, the Court held that a cause of action lies under ERISA § 502(a)(3) against a nonfiduciary party-in-interest who knowingly participates in a prohibited transaction. This result confirms earlier authority within this Circuit that permitted an action for disgorgement of profits against an ERISA nonfiduciary. See Brock v. Hendershott,
Extrapolating from Hams Tmst, the appellants argue that a party’s status as a fiduciary or nonfiduciary no longer matters in determining liability under ERISA. This reading overlooks the limiting principles of that case. First, as the Court pointed out, any recovery against a nonfiduciary under § 502(a)(3) is confined to “appropriate equitable relief.” Harris Trust,
Despite these limitations, Harris Trust supports appellants’ claim that a party’s nonfiduciary status is not always determinative of liability under ERISA. We recognize that, even were settling and non-settling defendants to share liability under ERISA, a right to contribution would not necessarily follow. See Texas Indus., Inc. v. Radcliff Materials, Inc.,
B. Form of the Set-Off
According to the settlement agreement, the $1.75 million fund reduces the liability of the non-settling defendants on a pro tanto basis. The non-settling defendants objected to the form of this set-off, arguing that they are entitled to a fairness hearing as to the nature and amount of the judgment credit. They maintain that their liability should be reduced according to the proportionate fault of the parties. Over these objections, the District Court endorsed the settling parties’ method of judgment reduction. Ordinarily, this decision would have triggered a hearing to determine whether the settlement and set-off were fair to the non-settling defendants. See In re Jiffy Lube Sec. Litig.,
As previously discussed, however, the basis for that conclusion has since been modified by Harris Trust. To the extent Harris Trust supports common liability and a right to contribution in this case, the District Court should reassess the fairness and sufficiency of the set-off as to the non-settling defendants. See In re Masters Mates & Pilots,
IV. OTHER CLAIMS
A. Adequacy of the Settlement
Pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 23.1, the District Court approved the settlement agreement as fair, reasonable, and adequate as to the plaintiffs and plan participants. Appellants contend that the court abused its discretion because it did not determine the total value of the case in relation to $1.75 million settlement. With claims dismissed against the settling defendants, appellants protest that they are
We do note, however, that our remand for reconsideration in light of Harris Trust might affect the District Court’s appraisal of the settlement. Because the settling defendants were nonfiduciaries under ERISA, the court concluded that disgorgement was unavailable as against them. As a form of equitable relief, however, disgorgement is allowed under Harris Trust,
B. Allocation of Costs on Appeal
In No. 99-3497, costs will be taxed against appellant Star Bank in accordance with Fed. R.App. P. 39(a)(2). In No. GO-3461, the appellants have filed a motion to impose the cost of the appendices on the appellees, arguing that they have included unnecessary parts of the record. As we remand the case for further proceedings and undoubtedly additional expense for all parties, we see no reason to depart from the default position of Fed. R.App. P. 30(b)(2), which requires the appellant to pay for the appendices. Even if, taken together, the appendices for this appeal span four volumes for 2211 pages — with a few duplicative designations — we find no part profligate or wholly unnecessary. We therefore order that the appellants pay the cost of producing the appendices. All other costs in No. 00-3461 are to be borne by the parties themselves.
y. CONCLUSION
As to No. 99-3497, we conclude that the plan’s financial and legal advisors were responsible for the quality of their work, but not for the devaluation of the Electro-Jet stock itself. The malpractice settlement accordingly compensated plaintiffs for deficient professional services rather than damage to company stock, whose true value had already declined. Because the settlement did not affect the ownership of the pledged stock or result in. its disposition, we AFFIRM the decision of the District Court denying Star Bank’s claim to the fund as proceeds of the pledged collateral.
As to No. 00-3461, we VACATE the decision of the District Court and REMAND for a determination of possible nonfiduciary liability under Hams Trust as affecting appellants’ claimed right of contribution. We express no view as to the existence of that right or the need for an evidentiary fairness hearing. The District Court should determine, in the first instance, how Harris Trust affects appellants’ theory of common liability and whether it supports their claimed right to contribution. Because the issue of nonfi-duciary liability remains undecided, we do not reach appellants’ challenge to the
Notes
. The appellants are all defendants and third-party defendants to the ERISA suit, with the exception of certain former Electro-Jet executives who did not join in this appeal.
. We note that the revised version of Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code might well require a different analysis. See G. Ray Warner, Lien on Me: The Right to Proceeds Under Revised Article 9. Am. Bankr.Inst. J.2001 ABI JNL. LEXIS 10, at *7 (2001) (noting how the revised Article 9 expands the concept of disposition to include property that originates from, but need not replace, the underlying collateral). In adopting the revised Article 9, the Ohio General Assembly has recently amended the definition of "proceeds” to also include, inter alia, "rights arising out of collateral” and, "to the extent of the value of collateral, claims arising out of the loss, nonconformity, or interference with the use of, defects or infringement of rights in, or damage to the collateral.” Ohio Rev.Code § 1309.102(A)(64). Here, however, we must apply the former version of the Ohio commercial code and its definition of proceeds found at Ohio Rev.Code § 1309.25(A). See Ohio Rev.Code § 1309.702(C) (noting that the recent revision of the Ohio statute "does not
. Because we conclude that this settlement fund does not fall with the definition of proceeds provided at Ohio Rev.Code § 1309.25(A), we need not reach the question of whether ERISA’s limited recourse provisions preempt Ohio law.
. The court also noted that the third-party defendants — Endres' lawyer and that lawyer's firm — had no right to contribution or indemnification. Though these third-party defendants joined Star Bank and Endres in briefing the issue, we agree with the District Court as to their legal rights. Appellants have not explained how these third-party defendants are liable to plaintiffs in any amount or on any theory giving rise to a claim for contribution from the settling defendants. See Restatement (Second) of Torts § 886A(1) ("... when two or more persons become liable in tort to the same person for the same harm, there is a right to contribution among them ...'') (emphasis added) (quoted in Centerior Serv. Co. v. Acme Scrap Iron & Metal Corp.,
