ROBERT W. MILGRAM, M.D., Plaintiff-Appellee, v. THE ORTHOPEDIC ASSOCIATES DEFINED CONTRIBUTION PENSION PLAN, Defendant-Appellant, v. ORTHOPEDIC ASSOCIATES OF 65 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE, BINGHAMTON, NEW YORK, P.C., as plan administrator of the Orthopedic Associates Defined Contribution Pension Plan; MICHAEL MCCLURE, M.D.; CHARLES W. CARPENTER, M.D.; KAMLESH S. DESAI, M.D.; LAURENCE U. SCHENK, M.D.; DOUGLASS R. KERR, M.D.; ROBERT M. SEDOR, JR., CFP, RCF, Upstate Management Associates, Inc., D/B/A The Bay Ridge Group; NORAH A. BREEN, Defendants.
Docket Nos. 10-1862-cv (L), 10-1893 (con)
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
November 29, 2011
August Term, 2011 (Argued: September 12, 2011)
CALABRESI, WESLEY, and LYNCH, Circuit Judges.
CARTER H. STRICKLAND, Mackenzie Hughes LLP, Syracuse, New York, for Plaintiff-Appellee.
JAMES E. HUGHES, Hancock & Estabrook LLP, Syracuse, New York, for Defendant-Appellant.
This appeal requires us tо consider what limitations, if any, the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (“ERISA”) imposes on the enforceability of a judgment rendered against pension plan assets under Section 502(a)(1) of that statute,
As the majority of the Plan’s claims assert legal errors in the district court’s judgment, unless otherwise noted our standard of review is de novo. See Hobson v. Metro. Life Ins. Co., 574 F.3d 75, 82 (2d Cir. 2009). Applying the appropriate standards of review, we find the Plan’s arguments to be without merit. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
BACKGROUND
Until he retired from the practice of medicine in 1991, Milgram worked as an orthopedic surgeon affiliated with the medical group Orthopedic Associates of 65 Pennsylvania Avenue, Binghamton, New York, P.C. (“Orthopedic”). By virtue of his membership in the group, Milgram became the beneficiary of two separate ERISA-governed pension plans. One was a defined contribution plan, the proceeds of which are at issue in this litigation (“the Plan” or “the MPP”); the other was a profit-sharing plan (“the PSP”). Under both plans, Orthopedic itself was formally designated as plan administrator. In practice, however, Orthopedic employed an outside entity on a contract basis to provide day-to-day administrative services. During the period relevant to this lawsuit, those services were provided by the Bay Ridge Group, which was headed by Robert Sedor.
In 1996 Milgram and his wife, Norah Breen, divorced. Their divorce settlement entitled Breen to half the balance in Milgram’s PSP fund (a share valued at $326,082 at the time of the settlement) and a fixed sum of $47,358 from Milgram’s MPP account plus accumulated earnings. Due to a clerical error, however, Bay Ridge transferred half of both accounts to a separate account created in Breen’s name. This resulted in Breen’s receiving $763,847.93 more than she was entitled to receive under the settlement.
Milgram did not discover the error immediately. Shortly after the accounts were segregated, he terminated his membership in the plans and rolled the remaining balances over to an Individual Retirement Account. Breen withdrew the balance of her account in September 1998. It was only in June of 1999 that Milgram, at his lawyer’s insistence,
The district court consolidated the two cases and discovery proceeded for several years thereafter. In October of 2005, Milgram moved for partial summary judgment against Orthopedic and the Plan, relying on a theory of contractual liability under ERISA § 502(a)(1),
In March 2006, soon after both motions were fully briefed, the district court announced that it would postpone decision and instead hold a bench trial on Milgram’s equitable claims. On thе first day of trial, however, the judge announced that he would
The trial took place over several days in the summer of 2006. Shortly after it concluded, the district court executed an order – the text of which was prepared jointly by attorneys for Milgram and Orthopedic – granting Milgram summary judgment against the Plan in the principal amount that was erroneously transferred to Breen ($763,847.93). The court reserved decision as to whether Milgram was also entitled to accumulated earnings and interest. In December 2006, Milgram moved to enforce the $763,847.93 judgment. The Plan opposed the motion, for the first time arguing that payment of the judgment would violate a specific ERISA provision – the statute’s prohibition on alienation of pension plan benefits. See ERISA § 206(d)(1),
The district court did not act on the motion until March 2010, at which time it issued the written opinion that is the subject of this appeal. The district court held that
The Plan subsequently moved to prohibit enforcement of the district court’s award in favor of Milgram, reasserting its clаim that requiring payment of the award before the Plan recovered from Breen would violate ERISA’s anti-alienation provisions. The Plan also argued, apparently for the first time, that it was entitled to relief from the judgement under
DISCUSSION
I. Plan Liability and ERISA’s Anti-Alienation Provision
ERISA provides that “[a]n employee benefit plan may sue or be sued under this subchapter as an еntity” and that any resulting money judgment “shall be enforceable only against the plan.” ERISA § 502(d)(1)-(2),
Nonetheless, the Plan asks us to read an exception into the unqualified language of Section 502. Although implicitly acknowledging that the “sue or be sued” language applies on its face to all ERISA-governed plans, the Plan argues that distinctions between types of plans that are drawn in other sections of the statute operate to constrain the remedial authority of the district court in proceedings under Section 502.
Subject to the exceptions provided below, no benefit which shall be payable to any person (including a Participant or his Beneficiary) shall be subject in any manner to anticipation, alienation, sale, transfer, assignment, pledge, encumbrance, or charge . . . .
The Plan argues that, although Mackey’s unqualified assertion that money judgments may be enforced against plan assets may have been a correct statement of the law with regard to welfare benefit plans, when the plan being sued is a pension plan, limitations like those in Section 9.3 and the provisions of federal law that mandate their inclusion in the document require a more nuanced approach.
The Plan does not dispute that under certain circumstances a defined contribution pension plan may be subject to a money judgment under Section 502. Rather it argues that, in this particular case, the district court erred by requiring the Plan to make good on its debt to Milgram before it had recovered the equivalent funds from Breen. That is because, in the Plan’s view, all of the assets currently held in the Plan constitute “benefits” allocated to Plan participants other than Milgram or Breen. Therefore, the Plan
As to the first point, the Plan takes its definition of “bеnefits” from Section 6.1 of the plan document, which provides that, upon retirement, a plan participant is entitled to collect “all amounts credited to such Participant’s Combined Account.” Elsewhere, the Participant’s Combined Account is defined as “the account established and maintained by the Administrator for each Participant with respect to his total interest under the Plan resulting from the Employer’s contributions.” See Plan Document § 1.48. Reading these provisions together, the Plan maintains that a participant’s inalienable “benefit” consists of all assets held by the Plan that are attributed at any point to that participant, whether or nоt the participant is currently entitled to collect them.
But the Plan’s argument proves too much. If it were true that, once credited to a particular participant’s account, Plan funds become “benefits” whose alienation and assignment is prohibited by ERISA, then the plan administrator would be prohibited from debiting participants’ accounts even to cover expenses that ERISA and the Plan specifically contemplate they will bear. For example, in years in which the trust corpus suffers an investment loss, Section 4.3(c) of the plan document requires the administrator
Moreover, the Plan’s reading of the plan document is highly selective. Section 6.1, from which the Plan draws its definition of “benefits,” is entitled “Determination of Benefits Upon Retirеment” and clearly states that the relevant calculations are to be performed “[u]pon [the plan participant’s] Normal Retirement Date or Early Retirement Date.” Plan assets therefore become “benefits” only when they are finally distributed to the participant at the time of retirement. Indeed, prior to that point, a participant cannot truly be said to have a claim to any particular assets in the trust corpus. “A defined contribution plan is not merely a collection of unrelated accounts.” LaRue, 552 U.S. at 262 (Thomas, J. concurring). Rather, all of the Plan’s undistributed assets are legally owned by the trustee and managed for the benefit of all plan participants, with gains and losses shared by them on a pro rata basis. A single participant’s “account” is merely a bookkeeping entry that is used at the time of his retirement to determine what benefits he is entitled to receive. See id.; see also O’Toole v. Arlington Trust Co., 681 F.2d 94, 96 (1st Cir. 1982) (distinguishing between trust corpus and “benefits” to conclude that
In this regard, it is significant that each of the cases that the Plan cites to support its anti-alienation argument concerns an effort to levy against pension income already being received by plan members. Thus, in Guidry v. Sheet Metal Workers National Pension Fund, 493 U.S. 365 (1990), the Supreme Court cited ERISA’s anti-alienаtion provision in refusing to allow a union that Guidry had defrauded to satisfy its judgment against him by garnishing current pension income. And, in Kickham Hanley P.C. v. Kodak Retirement Income Plan, 558 F.3d 204, 214 (2d Cir. 2009), this Court refused, on anti-alienation grounds, to permit the withholding of attorney’s fees from pension plan benefit payments to which the “plan participants [were] presently entitled.”
Nor do these cases support the Plan’s claim that if undistributed account funds could be considered “benefits,” their use to satisfy a court-ordered judgment against the Plan would be prohibited. Both Guidry and Kickham Hanley concerned a creditor’s efforts to levy on pension assets to satisfy obligations that had allegedly been incurred – directly or indirectly – by pensioners themselves. Neither case stands for the propоsition that ERISA’s anti-alienation provision would prevent the attachment of pension assets in order to satisfy the debts of the plan. Indeed, the structure of the statute strongly suggests a distinction between using plan assets to satisfy the debts of the plan and using plan assets to satisfy debts of plan participants. ERISA § 206(d) outlines several carefully circumscribed exceptions to its general prohibition on the alienation or assignment of
The Plan argues, however, that the absence of authority in support of its position should not end our inquiry. It notes that the alienation issue it identifies is particular to defined contribution pension plans, which, until relatively recently, were far less popular (and therefore far less likely to be the subject of litigation) than defined benefit plans. See LaRue, 552 U.S. at 255; see also Edward A. Zelinsky, The Defined Contribution Paradigm, 114 Yale L.J. 451, 471 (2004) (discussing the “significant reversal of historic patterns under which the traditional defined benefit plan was the dominant paradigm for the provision of retirement income”). The Plan maintains that a close examination of the distinctions between defined contribution and defined benefit plans compels the
The Plan is corrеct that the two types of pension plans differ in important respects. Defined benefit plans promise participants a specified, periodic benefit at retirement. Although the investment pool from which those benefits are drawn may be funded in various ways, the employer typically bears the risk associated with operating the plan and must cover any shortfall. See Hughes Aircraft Co. v. Jacobson, 525 U.S. 432, 439 (1999). In contrast, in a defined contribution plan, the employer contributes a fixed sum on a periodic basis. The employee’s benefits on retirement are a function of the contributions – his own and those of his employer – that have been credited to his account, “аnd any income, expenses, gains and losses, and any forfeitures of accounts of other participants which may be allocated to such participant’s account.” ERISA § 3(34);
Contrary to the Plan’s suggestion, then, the relative novelty of defined contribution plans does not explain our failure heretofore to recognize limits on the litigation risk that participants in such a plan can be required to bear on the plan’s behalf. Rather, it is the
II. The Plan’s Other Arguments Against Enforceability
In its attempt to avoid enforcement of the district court’s judgment, the Plan also relies on several other provisions of the plan document, ERISA, and New York State law that, it argues, prohibit Milgram from recovering from the Plan before the Plan has recouped the funds that it erroneously disbursed to Breen. These arguments are no more persuasive than the Plan’s anti-alienation argument.
For example, Section 9.7 of the plan document reads, “Except as provided below and otherwise specifically permitted by law, it shall be impossible . . . for any part of the corpus or income . . . to be used for, or divertеd to, purposes other than the exclusive benefit of Participants, Retired Participants, or their Beneficiaries.” The Plan suggests that the use of plan funds to compensate Milgram for the Plan’s misapplication of funds from his account would contravene this provision. That argument, however, ignores both the fact that Milgram himself is a “Retired Participant” and that, under ERISA § 502(d), the enforcement of a money judgment against plan assets is “specifically permitted by law.” See Mackey, 486 U.S. at 832.
The Plan further objects that to permit enforcement of the judgment would require Orthopedic, as plan administrator, to violate its fiduciary duties under the statute. ERISA § 404 requires the plan administrator to discharge its duties “solely in the interest of the participants and beneficiaries,” but it defines “defraying reasonable expenses of
This conclusion also answers the Plan’s claim that withdrawing plan assets to pay the judgment would constitute a prohibited transaction under ERISA § 406(b)(1),
The Plan also maintains that permitting recovery against plan assets would run afoul of ERISA’s directive that a “money judgment . . . against an employee benefit plan . . . shall not be enforceable against any other person unless liability against such person is established in his individual capacity.” ERISA § 502(d)(2),
Finally, the Plan argues that the district court erred in refusing to suspend enforcement of the judgment pursuant to either
In sum, we have considered all of the Plan’s arguments, and find that none of them warrants reversal of the district court’s judgment that the Plan must pay Milgram what he is due, whether or not it can succeed in recovering the funds that it, through no fault of Milgram’s, erroneously paid to Breen.
III. Milgram’s Entitlement to Accumulated Earnings and Prejudgment Interest
In addition to contesting the enforceability of the judgment as a whole, the Plan argues that the district court erred in awarding Milgram accumulated earnings and prejudgment interest on the $763,847.93 principal amount. The parties agree thаt under our decision in Dobson v. Hartford Financial Services Group, Inc., 389 F.3d 386 (2d Cir. 2004), Milgram’s right to be compensated for the time value of the misdirected funds is a question of contract interpretation to be decided under federal common law.
The Plan argues that the district court’s interpretation is unsustainable in light of the fact that, unlike the plan in Dobson, it has not had control over the missing funds during the period of delay and therefore has not able to profit from them. Yet the decision in Dobson did not turn on equitable considerations but rather on the express and implied terms of the plan document itself. In that regard, we noted that “[i]mplied agreements to pay interest on delayed disbursements of owed mоney fit squarely within [the] tradition of common law contract interpretation,” 389 F.3d at 399, and quoted at length from a Supreme Court opinion suggesting that compensation for the time value of money in breach of contract actions is dictated by “natural justice, and the law of every civilized country,” id., quoting Spalding v. Mason, 161 U.S. 375, 396 (1896).
The Plan also maintains that in awarding accumulated earnings and interest under a contract theory, the district court ignored the fact that Milgram contributed to the delay by failing to examine his plan statements until several years after the erroneous
The Plan’s other arguments, which largely rehash those it made regarding its liability on the principal sum, are similarly unavailing. The interest and accumulated earnings that Plan must pay to Milgram are expenses, like the рrincipal sum, that the Plan incurred due to its mismanagement of the trust fund. Plan members agreed to share such expenses as a condition of their participation in the fund. In any event, the fact that the Plan has a judgment against Breen, enforceable through a constructive trust, for the full amount that it must restore to Milgram gives us some confidence that no innocent party will suffer in the long run.
CONCLUSION
We have considered all of the Plan’s remaining arguments and find them to be without merit. Accordingly, for the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
