Plaintiff Robert Stern, supported by amicus curiae the Secretary of Labor, contends that this matter was improperly removed to federal court because his employer’s sickness/accident program is exempted by regulation from being considered a “welfare benefits plan” under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, 29 U.S.C. § 1001-1461. We аgree. We vacate the summary judgment order, reverse the order denying Stern’s motion to remand, and remand with an instruction to return this case to the state court.
I
In 1999, Robert Stern, an IBM employee, injured his hand, which rendered him unable to work. IBM has a “Sickness and Accident Income Plan,” which provides up to 52 weeks of аn employee’s “regular salary” when he is unable to work due to sickness or an accident. The IBM Program defines “unable to work” as “unable to perform the duties of the job you held at the time of your sickness or accident, or the duties of any other job that IBM determines that you are capable of performing.” IBM makes payments to employees who qualify for the program out of the company’s general assets.
After IBM discontinued paying him Program benefits, Stern sued in state court for breach of his employment agreement. IBM removed the case to the federal district court, contending that the IBM Progrаm is an ERISA “welfare benefit plan.” *1370 IBM argued that because the Program constitutes an ERISA welfare benefits plan, the Act preempts Stern’s state law action. IBM then moved to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim under ERISA.
The district court denied Stern’s motion to remand. Without discussing whether the Program constitutеs a “payroll practice” specifically exempted from ERISA by 29 C.F.R. § 2510.3-l(b)(2), the court found the IBM Program to be an ERISA plan. It granted IBM’s motion to dismiss the state complaint and gave Stern leave to file an amended complaint asserting claims under ERISA. The court later found that IBM had not violated ERISA and granted summary judgment in favor of IBM. Stern appeals the court’s denial of his motion to remand and is supported by
amicus curiae
the Secretary of Labor. We review
de novo
the orders denying Stern’s motion to remand to state court and granting IBM’s motion for summary judgment.
See Henson v. Ciba-Geigy Corp.,
II
ERISA regulates “employee welfare benefit plans,” which include plans that provide employees “benefits in the event of sickness, accident, [or] disability.” 29 U.S.C. § 1002(1). ERISA also broadly preempts state laws relating to any employee benefit plan. 29 U.S.C. § 1144(a). However, the Secretary of Labor has promulgated a regulation that excludes certain “payroll practices” from the application of ERISA. That regulation provides thаt an “employee benefit welfare plan” shall not include:
Payment of an employee’s normal compensation, out of the employer’s general assets, on account of periods of time during which the employee is physically or mentally unable to perform his or her duties, or is otherwisе absent for medical reasons....
29 C.F.R. § 2510.3-l(b)(2). The sole legal question presented here — one not considered by the district court — is whether IBM’s Program is a payroll practice that is exempted from ERISA’s coverage.
Under 28 U.S.C. § 1441(a), subject to certain exceptions that are not applicable here, “аny civil action brought in a State court of which the district courts of the United States have original jurisdiction[ ] may be removed by the defendant” to federal court. In “federal question” cases such as the one at bar, the “well-pleaded complaint rule” holds that a federal defense to a state law сlaim generally is insufficient to satisfy the requirements of 28 U.S.C. § 1331. Instead, the federal question must “necessarily appear[ ] in the plaintiffs statement of his own claim in the bill or declaration, unaided by anything alleged in anticipation of avoidance of defenses which it is thought the defendant may interpose.”
Oklahoma Tax Comm’n v. Graham,
As binding as the “well-pleaded complaint rule” is, however, it permits an *1371 extremely narrow exception in cases implicating the doctrine of complete preemptiоn. As we recently explained in Geddes v. Am. Airlines, Inc.:
Preemption is the power of federal law to displace state law substantively. The federal preemptive power may be complete, providing a basis for jurisdiction in the federal courts, or it may be what has been called “ordinary preemption,” providing а substantive defense to a state law action on the basis of federal law. More specifically, ordinary preemption may be invoked in both state and federal court as an affirmative defense to the allegations in a plaintiffs complaint. Such a defense asserts that the state claims hаve been substantively displaced by federal law. Complete preemption, on the other hand, is a doctrine distinct from ordinary preemption. Rather than constituting a defense, it is a narrowly drawn jurisdictional rule for assessing federal removal jurisdiction when a complaint purports to raise only statе law claims. It looks beyond the complaint to determine if the suit is, in reality, purely a creature of federal law, even if state law would provide a cause of action in the absence of the federal law, thus creating the federal question jurisdiction requisite to removal to federal courts.
Although the doctrine of complete preemption is extremely limited, and has been found by the Supreme Court to exist in only two substantive contexts, one of these is section 502 of ERISA, 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a).
See Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Taylor,
The IBM Program fits within the express terms of the Secretary’s payroll practices regulation. It pays out of IBM’s general assets an employee’s normal compensation during periods when the employee is physically or mentally unable to work. The Secretary is specifically authorized to define ERISA’s “accounting, technical and trade terms,” 29 U.S.C. § 1135, and her reasonable views are given deference by the courts.
See Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Res. Def. Council, Inc.,
The Supreme Court has discussed the primary purpose of ERISA:
In enacting ERISA, Congress’ primary concern was with the mismanagement of funds accumulated to finance employee benefits and the failure to pay employees benefits from accumulated funds. To that end, it established extensivе re: porting, disclosure, and fiduciary requirements to insure against the possibility that the employee’s expectation of the benefit would be defeated through poor management by the plan administrator. Because ordinary vacation payments are typically fixed, due at known times, and do not depend on contingencies outside the employee’s control, they present none of the risks that ERISA is intended to address. If there is a danger of defeated expectations, it is no different from the danger of defeated expectations of wages for services performed — a danger Congrеss chose not to regulate in ERISA.
Morash,
The district court found ERISA coverage by relying on a cursory citation to
Donovan v. Dillingham,
For this reason, IBM’s reliance on
Whitt v. Sherman Int’l Corp.,
IBM argues that the Program provides more than “traditional sick leave,” but fails to offer a persuasive reason for why the Program’s terms do not fit comfortably within the payroll practices regulation. According to IBM,
Morash
stands for the proposition that ERISA coverage would exist for otherwise exempted practices where “either the employee’s right to a benefit is contingent upon some future occurrence or the employee bears a risk different from his ordinary employment risk.”
Morash,
For the first time on appeal, IBM asserts that it annually files Form 5500 with the Department of Labor and the IRS identifying the Program as an ERISA plan. IBM offers no supporting documen
*1374
tation and the plaintiff strongly contests this assertion. The way in which an employer characterizes its plan may be one factor, among others, in determining ERISA coverage.
See, e.g., Whitt,
A defendant may remove a case to federal cоurt only if the district court would have had jurisdiction over the case had the case been brought there originally. 28 U.S.C. § 1441. Because the IBM Program is exempted by regulation from ERISA, the doctrine of complete preemption is inapplicable and no federal question jurisdiction exists,
see Kemp v. Int’l Bus. Machs. Corp.,
Ill
We VACATE the order granting summary judgment to the defendant, REVERSE the order denying plaintiffs motion to remand, and REMAND with an instruction to return this case to the state court.
Notes
. IBM challenges the Secretary's interpretation of the payroll practices regulation but not the Secretary's authority to promulgate it.
