The Department of Labor appeals from the dismissal of a suit that it brought against an insurance company for monetary relief under ERISA. The trustees of a union pension fund had obtained from Continental Casualty Company a оne-year extension of the fiduciary liability insurance policy that Continental had previously issued to them. According to the Department of Labor, the extension provided only $1 million in additional coverage yet Continental charged a premium of $970,000 for the extension and the fund paid the premium. The Department sued both the trustees and Continental — the trustees for having breached their fiduciary duty to the fund by obtaining insurance for their own protection at a price disproportionate to any possible benefit to the fund, and Continental for having knowingly participated in the trustees’ breach. Relief sought included an order that “the defendants, jointly and severally, ... rеstore to the [pension fund] all losses sustained as a result of the breaches of fiduciary duties or participation therein” and that Continental “disgorge all payments it received ... as a result of its participation in thе breaches of fiduciary duties.”
The claim against the trustees was settled, but for less than the amount sought by the Department, so the case proceeded to trial against Continental. Midway in the trial the Supreme Court decidеd
Mertens v. Hewitt Associates,
— U.S.-,
But en route to its interpretation of “other equitable relief,” the Supreme Court in
Mer-tens
had said that it was far from clear that a suit against a рarty that was (in
Mertens
as in this case) not a fiduciary but merely a knowing participant in a fiduciary’s breach of duty was within the scope of the statute, regardless of the nature of the relief sought. The Court pointed out that no provision of ERISA, which it described as a carefully drafted statute, makes a nonfiduciary liable for knowing participation in a fiduciary’s breach of duty, even though such liability was well established under the common law of trusts. But since the parties had assumed the applicability of the statute and quarreled only over the remedy, the Court decided to place decision on the narrow ground that the statute did not authorize the remedy of damages.
Id.
— U.S. at -,
There is an initial question whether restitution should be classified as an equitable remedy; if not, the Department cannot succeed, because the statute confines it to equitable relief. Restitution is a remedy historically and today dispensed in law and eq
*756
uity proceedings alike.
First National Bank v. Warren,
The Court’s search in
Mertens
was, however, for
distinctively
equitable relief on the one hand and, on the other,
distinctively
legal relief, such as damages, which though sometimes awarded by a court of equity under thе “cleanup” doctrine,
Medtronic, Inc. v. Intermedies, Inc., supra,
But was the Department of Labor seeking restitution? It was seeking not a profit, but merely a receipt, an insurance premium, net of some expenses; to call this a “profit,” it could be argued, would convert every suit for the price of a contract into a suit for restitution, contrary to the lаw. 1 Dobbs, supra, § 4.1(2), p. 559. But what the Department was really seeking, and what the concept of unjust enrichment and its remedial corollary restitution do encompass, was to recover a “negative unjust enrichment,” consisting of the unjust avoidance of a loss. 1 id., § 509, pp. 802-03; Dan B. Dobbs, Handbook on the Law of Remedies: Damages-Equity-Restitution § 4.5, p. 278 (1973). The Depart- *757 merit’s argument is that Continental Casualty was already liable for the claims against the trustees that the $1 million extension of coverage was ostensibly obtained to cover, so that the $818,000 net premium reduced its underwriting losses by that amount. It benefited to that extent, and at the expense of the pension fund. “Negative unjust enrichment” is a clumsy term, but the concept is straightforward. If A steals from B to pay a debt to C, A is unjustly enriched at B’s expense, even though the consequenсe of the theft was to reduce A’s obligation to G rather than to put money in A’s pocket.
Why, if Continental was already liable for the claims against the trustees, the trustees would pay for the extension of coverage is not explained by this theory; but we need not wоrry about this, for quite apart from any doubts about the character of the remedy sought the Department of Labor has no claim. A majority of the Supreme Court has made clear its view that Congress’s omission to impose оn nonfiduciaries a duty not to participate knowingly in an ERISA fiduciary’s breach of fiduciary obligations was not inadvertent; that Congress knew that at common law (including in that term the judge-made law of equity) nonfidueiaries were subject tо “knowing participation” liability in trust cases, and knowing this decided not to cast the net of ERISA liability that wide. This is a strict constructionist’s approach that we might not embrace as an original matter. ERISA is a detailed and carefully drаfted statute, true. But Congress is not omniscient, and even its detailed and carefully drafted statutes contain inadvertent omissions that courts might properly undertake to rectify if satisfied that by doing so they would not be upsetting a compromise — satisfied, that is, that the omission was indeed inadvertent rather than deliberate. We are impressed by the Department’s argument that the scope of ERISA’s preemption provision is so broad that pension funds may well bе remediless against knowing participants in fiduciary misconduct (its remedy against the misbehaving fiduciaries themselves may be inadequate because of the limitations of their solvency, and proved to be so in this case), though the force of this point is diminished by the fact that the holding in Mertens, which we are not free to question, strips the pension funds, or here their surrogate the Department of Labor, of their principal remedy — a suit for damages.
The Supreme Court considered all these points in Mertens and found them unimprеssive. The majority opinion goes out of its way to throw cold water on the idea of an implied liability of nonfiduciaries for knowing participation in fiduciaries’ misconduct. The discussion is dictum, but it is considered dictum. If we thought the Court hаd overlooked some point that might have altered its view, we would be less reluctant to buck the dictum. But it appears not to have. The Department’s brief in our case devotes only a few pages to criticism of the Mertens dictum, and the points it makes were addressed and rejected by the Court.
Justice Holmes has been derided for claiming in “The Path of the Law,” 10 Harv.L.Rev. 457, 461 (1897), that the law is merely a prediction of what the courts will do. The theory has many weaknеsses, but also a valid core. In areas of profound uncertainty, such as whether a statute that does not explicitly impose duties on nonfiduciaries should be interpreted as doing so implicitly because of the baсkground of trust law against which it was enacted and the vagueness and breadth of “other appropriate relief’ with no specified limitation as to whom the relief can be sought from, federal law is for all practicаl purposes what the Supreme Court says it is. When the Court’s view is embodied in a holding, the Court’s reluctance to overrule its precedents enables a confident prediction that that holding is “the law.” When the view is embodied in a dictum, prediction cannot be made with the same confidence. But where it is a recent dictum that considers all the relevant considerations and adumbrates an unmistakable conclusion, it would be reckless to think the Court likеly to adopt a contrary view in the near future. In such a case the dictum provides the best, though not an infallible, guide to what the law is, and it will ordinarily be the duty of a lower court to be guided by it.
Thornton v. Evans,
AFFIRMED.
