The Plumbers and Pipefitters Local Union No. 572 entered into a collective bargaining agreement with a multi-employer association, which included A-H Mechanical Contractors, Inc. (whom the plaintiffs mistakenly refer to as “A & H Mechanical Contractors, Inc.”) as one of its members. The agreement required participating employers to makе contributions to the Union’s Health and Welfare Fund and Pension Fund on behalf of employees. When A-H tried to terminate the agreement and to discontinue its contributions, the funds sued the company under § 515 of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA), 29 U.S.C. § 1145. Determining that A-H had properly terminated its participation in the collective bargaining agrеement, the district court granted A-H’s summary judgment motion and denied the Funds’ request for a preliminary injunction. As we agree with that conclusion, we affirm.
I.
A-H Mechanical Contractors was a member of a multi-employer association known as The Master Plumbing, Heating, Piping and Air Conditioning Contractors of Nashville and Vicinity (the “Association”). On behalf of its member employеrs, the Association entered into a collective bargaining agreement with the Plumbers and Pipefitters Local Union No. 572 (the “Union”), which became “effective [on] May 1, 1998” and extended “through April 30, 2001” (“the 1998 Agreement”). The 1998 Agreement required employers to contribute to the Union’s Health and Welfare Fund and Pension Fund (the “Funds”) at fixed rates per employee-hour worked. As provided in the agreement, these rates increased each year from May 1,1998 to April 30, 2001. The 1998 Agreement also contained an “evergreen” clause, which renewed the contract each year unless a contracting party gave notice of termination at least 60 days before April 30, 2001.
On February 19, 2001, the Chairman of A-H, V.H. Alessio Jr., wrote a letter to the Union and the Association advising them that “A-H Mechanical Contractors, Inc., hereby withdraws its affiliation with the [Association] and will no longer be bound by any collective bargaining agreement entered into by that historical bargaining group.” After sending the letter, A-H did not participate in negotiations between the Union and the Association regarding a new collective bargaining agreement, which the parties eventually signed on April 30, 2001 and which became “effective May 1, 2001 through April 30, 2007” (the “2001 Agreement”). Nonetheless, A-H continued to make contributions to the Funds at the prevailing rates of the 2001 Agreement on behalf of several specific employees for several months.
Shortly after A-H disсontinued these contributions in October or November 2001, the Funds filed this lawsuit, alleging that A-H “was [ ] obligated to pay contributions on behalf of employees covered by the collective bargaining agreement” to the Funds. See 29 U.S.C. § 1145 (requiring employers “obligated to make contributions to a multiemployer plan” to “make such contributions”). The Funds requested a judgment in the amount of contributions owed and an injunction to enforce future contributions.
Soon after filing the lawsuit, the Funds opened a second front in the dispute. Invoking the “Grievance Procedures” of the 1998 and 2001 Agreements, they filed a grievance against A-H with the Joint Arbitration Committee, which is composed of three Association representatives and three Uniоn representatives. See 1998 Agreement, art. XII § 2 (“All differences
In ruling on the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment, the district court held that A-H’s letter of February 19, 2001(1) terminated the 1998 Agreement and (2) precluded A-H from becoming a party to the 2001 Agreement by withdrawing the company from the Association before negotiations for the 2001 Agreement had commenced. As a result, the court concluded, A-H owed no contributions to the Funds beyond April 30, 2001.
II.
On appeal, the Funds make three arguments: (1) the Joint Arbitration Committee permissibly and conclusively determined that A-H by its conduct became a party to the 2001 Agreement, a determination that bound the district court; (2) A-H failed as a matter of law to notify the Funds and the Union that it was withdrawing from the 1998 Agreement; and (3) A-H’s termination “defense” may not be asserted in response to an ERISA plan’s claim for contributions under 29 U.S.C. § 1145. We give a fresh look to each of the legal issues as well as to the district court’s decision to grant summary judgment in favor of A-H. Pinney Dock & Transp. Co. v. Penn Cent. Corp.,
A.
The Funds initially argue that the Joint Arbitration Committee’s decision — to the effect that A-H became a party to the 2001 Agreement by virtue of its conduct— was binding on the district court. We disagree.
Federal courts, it is true, generally give considerable deference to the arbitration process and to arbitration decisions themselves. See United Paperworkers Int’l Union v. Misco, Inc.,
Nor can the Funds tenably maintain that the committee’s arbitration authority stemmed from the 1998 Agreement. Although “a party’s obligation to arbitrate does not automatically cease upon termination of the collective bargaining agreement,” the dispute submitted to arbitration still must be one that arises under the terminated agreemеnt. Gen. Drivers, Salesmen & Warehousemen’s Local Union No. 984 v. Malone & Hyde, Inc.,
B.
The parties share common ground in discussing the legal principles underlying the Funds’ notice argument. Under ERISA § 515, employers (like A-H) who are “obligated to make contributions to a multiemployer plаn” (like the Funds’ plan) must as a matter of federal law “make such contributions.” 29 U.S.C. § 1145. An employer’s contractual obligation to make these contributions may arise from a collective bargaining agreement, including one involving several employers. See Carpenters S. Cal. Admin. Corp. v. Russell,
The rub in this case is whether A-H’s attempt to terminate its membership in the Association permissibly ended its contribution obligations on April 30, 2001. The 1998 Agreement contains a termination-or-renewal provision, which reads as follows:
[T]he termination date [of] this Contract is April 30, 2001, and this Contract shall*401 be extended on a year to year basis following that date, unless any party to this Contract shall give written notice not later than sixty (60) days prior to April 30, 2001 ... and in the event of any party so giving notice, this Contract shall terminate and be of no further force and effect after April 30, 2001.
1998 Agreement, art. XIII § 6. Attempting to comply with this provision, the Chairman of A-H sent the Association and Union letters, which in their entirety both said: “Please be advised that A-H Mechanical Contractors, Inc., hereby withdraws its affiliation with the [Association] and will no longer be bound by аny collective bargaining agreement entered into by that historical bargaining group.”
By their terms, the letters properly terminated A-H’s obligations under the existing 1998 Agreement and prevented those obligations from renewing automatically. The letters express A-H’s intent to terminate the 1998 Agreement and its intent not to be bound by any future agreements. As to the 1998 Agreement, the letters communicate A-H’s withdrawal as to “any collective bargaining agreement entered into” previously. As to future agreements, the withdrawal letters say that A-H “hereby withdraws” from the Association.
The notice also makes it clear that A-H was not, and could not be, a party to the 2001 Agreement. The notice withdrew AH from the Association and resсinded any authority that the Association previously had to bargain on its behalf. In this respect, the notice was both unequivocal (stating that A-H “hereby withdraws its affiliation with the [Association]”) and timely (it was given before the Union and the Association entered negotiations for a new agreement).
The Funds offer two arguments in response, each of them unavailing. First, еven if A-H “effectively gave notice to withdraw from the multi-employer bargaining unit,” they say that the letter “did not give notice of intent to modify or terminate” the 1998 Agreement. Appellant’s Br. at 12. But the unyielding reference to all collective bargaining agreements and the use of the past tense in communicating that purpose — as in A-H “will no longer be bound by any collective bargaining agreement entered into by thаt historical bargaining group” (emphasis added) — suffice to defeat this claim.
Second, the Funds argue that A-H failed to file an answer in this case and accordingly conceded the allegation in the complaint that “[d]uring all pertinent times, [A-H] was party to a collective bargaining agreement [ ] [p]ursuant to [which], [A-H] was to pay certain contributions.” But in invоking this procedural rule, the Funds must submit to a procedural requirement for raising it. Namely, while it is true that A-H did not file an answer, the Funds never raised this argument below when the parties filed their competing motions for summary judgment. As a general matter, we “will not consider arguments raised for the first time on appeal unless [] failure to consider the issue will result in a plain miscarriаge of justice.” United States v. Ninety-Three Firearms,
C.
The Funds next contend that employers like A-H may not assert a termi
Under traditional contract law principles, third-party beneficiaries of a contract are subject to the same enforcement dеfenses as the original contracting party. See Bituminous Coal Operators’ Ass’n, Inc. v. Connors,
The Funds do not dispute these principles of contract law; they instead claim that § 515 of ERISA alters these principles in the context of an action to collect contributions by an ERISA plan. Under § 515:
Every employer who is obligated to mаke contributions to a multiemployer plan under the terms of the plan or under the terms of a collectively bargained agreement shall, to the extent not inconsistent with law, make such contributions in accordance with the terms and conditions of such plan or agreement.
29 U.S.C. § 1145.
As the Funds correctly point out, numerous courts have construed this provision to preclude certain contract law defenses that would transform run-of-the-mill collection efforts by plan trustees into expensive and complex litigation relating to the employer-union relationship. See Louisiana Bricklayers & Trowel Trades Pension Fund & Welfare Fund v. Alfred Miller Gen. Masonry Contracting Co.,
In view of these realities of plan management, courts have permitted defendants in these actions to raise only a few discrete “defenses”: (1) illegality of the original contract; (2) arguments that the contract was void at its inception (e.g., by fraud in the execution); and (3) decertification of the union. See Alfred Miller Gen. Masonry,
A-H’s termination-of-the-contract contention fits comfortably within these exceptiоns to the general rule against asserting contract defenses in an ERISA § 515 action. Instead of a precluded contract “defense,” A-H’s termination argument goes to the question whether a contractual promise to contribute exists in the first instance. See Laborers Health & Welfare Trust Fund v. Fisher Dev., Inc., No. 94-15596,
In response to this conclusion, the Funds argue that we should follow Carpenters Health & Welfare Trust Fund v. Bla-Delco Constr., Inc.,
III.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm.
