Thе issue presented in this case is whether appellants’ claims under Mandatory Decree No. 38 of the Minimum Wage Board of Puerto Rico are preempted by § 514(a) of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, 29 U.S.C. §§ 1001
et seq.,
as amended (“ERISA”). Appellants Obdulio Rosario-Cordero and Otilio Martinez-Arroyo (“Appellants”) initiated this action in Puerto Rico local court against their former employer, Crowley Towing and Transportation Company (“Crowley”), alleging that they were not allowed to enjoy vacation leave duly owed them pursuant to Mandatory Decree No. 38. The case was removed to the United States District Court for the District of Puerto Rico on Crowley’s theory that Appellants’ claims under Mandatory Decree No. 38 were preempted by ERISA.
Rosario-Cordero v. Crowley Towing & Transp. Co.,
BACKGROUND
Crowley operates a tugboat operation covering Puerto Rico, ports in the continental United States, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and some international ports. The nature of Crowley’s operations requires its employees to travel to the different ports to provide tug services.
Most of Crowley’s employees are members of the Seafarers’ International Union, Atlantic, Gulf, Lakes and Inland Waters District, AFL-CIO (the “Union”). During all relevant periods, Appellants were members of the Union, аnd the Union was their exclusive bargaining representative. Pursuant to a Collective Bargaining Agreement (the “CBA”), the Union and Crowley agreed to participate in the Seafarers’ Vacation Plan (the “Plan”).
The Plan is a multiemployer employee benefit plan which provides vacation benefits to the employees of its members. The Plan is structured and governed in accordance with ERISA It is administered by an Administrator. The Administrator, in turn, is appointed by the Plan’s twelve-member Board of Trustees. Six of the Trustees are appointed by the Union and the other six by the participating employers.
The Plan provides for the establishment of a fund from contributions from the participating employers. The contributions are deposited in the Plan’s bank accounts. These funds, which contain only Plan monies, are held in trust, and a portion of the assets are invested in bonds and notes. The funds are used to pay vacation benefits tо the eligible participants, and to cover the Plan’s administrative costs. Under the CBA, Crowley was required to make periodic contributions to the Plan for each employee.
*122 The Plan triggers vacation pay when an employee has worked seventy-five days in a fifteen-month period, irrespective of whether the employee intends to actually take the vacation leave. During their employment, both Appellants applied fоr and received the vacation payment due them under the Plan’s terms, although they did not take the vacation leave. Appellants are now retired.
Despite their receipt of vacation pay under the Plan, Appellants filed suit against Crowley, claiming that they were never allowed to take their vacation leave as mandated by Puerto Rico’s Mandatory Decree No. 38, (the “Decree”). 1 The Decree provides in relevant part:
Every employee shall be entitled to vacation leave with full pay to become effective when he begins to enjoy it, at the rate of one and five twelves [sic] (1%) days for each month in which he has worked at least one hundred (100) hours. This leave is equivalent to seventeen (17) workdays per year....
The employer who does not grant any of his employees the vacation leave to which he is entitled after having accrued it for two (2) years, shall grant him the total thus far accrued, paying him twice (2) the wage corresponding to the period accrued in excess of said two years....
Any contract whereby the employee waives, for money or other consideration, his right to actually take his vacation leave shall be unlawful and void.
Appellants claim, therefore, that Crowley is obligated to pay them a sum equivalent to seventeen days of work per year of service, plus the double penalty provided by the Decree.
DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
Because the district court granted summary judgment in Crowley’s favor, we review that decision
de novo. Serrano-Perez v. FMC Corp.,
B. Preemption Under ERISA Generally
As the Appellants correctly point out, preemption of state law is generally disfavored.
McCoy v. Massachusetts Inst. of Technology,
ERISA preemption is, as a general matter, expansive in scope.
McCoy,
The United States Supreme Court has repeatedly explained that a state law “relates to” an employee benefit plan “ ‘if it has a connection with or reference to such a plan.’”
District of Columbia v. Greater Washington Bd. of Trade,
— U.S. -, -,
Following the Supreme Court’s lead, this Circuit has also construed the words “relate to” broadly; a state law may relate to an employee benefit plan even though the law does not conflict with ERISA’s own requirements, and represents an otherwise legitimate state effort to impose or broaden benefits for emрloyees.
Simas v. Quaker Fabric Corp. of Fall River,
Therefore, a state law with even an indirect effect on an ERISA-covered benefit plan is preempted, even though ERISA by its terms may not necessarily address the topic covered by the state law. For example, a state law is preempted if it restricts the choices of a benefit plan regarding its administration, structure, or benefits.
See, e.g., FMC Corp. v. Holliday,
This broad preemptive effect of ERISA may be surprising, given that ERISA was passed primarily to safeguard employees from the abuse and mismanagement of funds accumulated in various types of employee benefit plans.
Fort Halifax Packing Co. v. Coyne,
Finally, we address what plans constitute “employee benefit plans” for § 514(a)’s purposes. The district court ably set forth the applicable law on this point in its opinion,
Crowley,
[A]ny plan, fund, or program which was heretofore or is hereafter established оr maintained by an employer or by an employee organization, or by both, to the extent that such plan, fund, or program was established or is maintained for the purpose of providing for its participants or beneficiaries, (A) ... vacation benefits_
29 U.S.C. § 1002(1) (emphasis added). ERISA does not further define “plan, fund or program” or “vacation benefits.” The Supreme Court, however, has clearly stated that “a multiemployer fund created to pro
*124
vide vacation benefits for union mеmbers who typically work for several employers during the course of a year ... undoubtedly falls within the scope of the Act.”
Massachusetts v. Morash,
[W]e emphasize that the case before us ... eoncem[s] payments by a single employer out of its general assets. An entirely different situation would be presented if a separate fund had been created by a group of employers to guarantee the payment of vacation benefits to laborers who regularly shift their jobs from one employer to another. Employees who are а beneficiary of such a trust face far different risks and have far greater need for the reporting and disclosure requirements [of ERISA] than those whose vacation benefits come from the same fund from which they receive their paychecks.
Morash,
Given these principles, therefore, our task becomes clear. We must determine 1) whether the Plan at issue in this case is an “employee benefit plan” within the scope of ERISA, and if so, 2) whether the Decree “relates to” the Plan. If it does, then ERISA preempts the Decree and Appellants’ claims under the Decree are foreclosed.
C. Is the Plan Covered by ERISA?
As we explained above, the Plan is a multiemployer employee benefit plan established and governed in accordance with ERISA. Under the Plan, employees, including the Appellants here, become entitled to vacation benefits regardless of their employer, as long as they work seventy-fivе days in a fifteen-month period. Employees seeking their vacation benefits must apply directly to the Plan Administrator to obtain them. The benefits are then paid to employees out of a segregated trust fund established solely for that purpose, and not out of the general assets of any individual employer.
The employers’ participation in the Plan consists solely of making the required contributions. The individual employers, including Crowley, are not involved in the application for or the administration of the benefits. In fact, the payment of vacation benefits under the Plan rests on contingencies and processes entirely outside of the individual employers’ and employees’ control.
It seems clear to us that this Plan, is precisely the type of plan that Congress intended to reach in enacting ERISA. It certainly falls squarely within the description, quoted above, set forth by the Supreme Court in
Morash,
D. Does the Decree “Relate to” the Plan?
Appellants contend that the Decree does not “relate to” the Plan because 1) the Decree is a law of “general applicability” not aimed at the administration of ERISA plans; 2) the penalty imposed by the Decree does not constitute a “plan” such as ERISA is meant to regulate; and 3) if the cause of action created by the Decree were preempted, employees would be left without a remedy at law. We address eаch of these contentions in turn.
1. Is the Decree a “law of general application” with a connection “too tenuous, remote, or peripheral” to relate to the Plan?
Appellants claim that the Decree is a regulation directed at all employers in the trans *125 portation industry regardless of whether they maintain an ERISA-covered plan. The Decree, they explain, mandates and regulates vacation leave and other working conditions for the protection of workers in that industry. As such, it is a law of general applicability neither directed at nor predicated upon the existence of an ERISA plan, and thus does not “relate to” the Plan.
In support of their argument on this point, Appellants submit an inaccurate statement of the law. Significantly, they incorrectly rely on the traditional preemption analysis applicable to less comprehensive federal statutes, arguing that the Decree here is not preempted because it does not interfere with ERISA’s overriding concern of protecting beneficiaries of employee benefit plans from fraud or misuse of plan funds. As we have explained, however, the broad preemption clause of ERISA obliges courts to apply ERISA’s preemptive effects expansively, and therefore the preemption analysis under ERISA is entirely different than for other federal statutes. Thus, the narrower preemption analysis offered by the Appellants is simply inapplicable here. 2
Although the Decree is indeed a law of general application affecting employers regardless of their participation in plans, this does not necessarily save it from preemption. As we explained, laws of general application will be preempted if they “relate to” an ERISA-covered рlan, even indirectly.
Greater Washington Bd. of Trade,
— U.S. at -,
In many respects, therefore, the Decree’s requirements differ from or conflict with the terms of the Plan. Under the Decree, the employer determines when the employee takes vacation leave or payment; under the Plan, the choice is the employee’s, and the employer is not involved in the disbursement of vacation benefits. Under the Plan, an employee accrues vacation benefits after working at least seventy-five days in a fifteen-month period, whereas the Decree es *126 tablishes a different timeframe for triggering leave. Most significantly, the Decree imposes a penalty on non-complying employers, and prohibits any alternative arrangements.
In all these respects, the Decree imposes different requirements on employers than those imposed by the Plan, and affects the accrual and disbursement of vacation benefits to employee members of the Plan. Moreover, the manner and degree to which the Decree affects the Plan is substantial, and cannot be termed “tenuous, remote, or peripheral.” Indeed, the Decree by its terms would prohibit a significant aspect of the Plan, which allows employees to receive vacation payments in lieu of leave. Therefore, we find that the Decree does “relate to” the Plan for purposes of § 514(a) of ERISA.
2. Appellants’ remaining contentions
Appellants also contend that the Decree does not create a “plan” such as ERISA is meant to regulate. Because the Decree is only concerned with “vacation leave” and not with the field of “vacation plans,” they claim, the Decree is not preempted. Oncе again, this argument seems to rest on the Appellants’ misguided perception of the applicable preemption principles. ERISA preempts state laws that relate to covered plans; it does not require that a state law establish such a plan, or expressly contemplate existing plans, in order for preemption to apply. As we have explained above, the Plan here is a covered plan under the terms of ERISA, and the Decree significantly affects its administration and restricts its terms. It is, therefore, preempted by ERISA insofar as it affects ERISA-covered plans.
Appellants finally argue that if the Decree is preempted, employees would be left without a remedy in law. They claim that Crowley seeks here to “ ‘don the mantle of ERISA’ ” to escape its obligation to comply with Puerto Rico’s employment practices law (quoting
Combined Management,
Although we are sympathetic to the Appellаnts’ argument on this point, it unfortunately is unavailing. As we explained above, one of the primary purposes of ERISA’s broad preemption clause was to prevent states from imposing divergent obligations, and to thereby allow employers to create and administer employee benefit plans subject to one uniform set of regulations.
Simas,
Finаlly, we point out that if the Appellants had been improperly denied benefits, which is not the case here, they would have a cause of action under ERISA. Therefore, although they lose their legal remedy under the Decree through preemption, they gain the protections of ERISA by participating in an ERISA-covered plan.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we find that ERISA preempts Mandatory Decree No. 38 insofar as it relates to ERISA-covered employee benefit plans. The district court’s order is therefore affirmed.
Notes
. The Decree is one of 43 decrees promulgated by the Minimum Wage Board of Puerto Rico. The Board is authorized by Section 2 of the Minimum Wage Act of Puerto Rico, 29 L.P.R.A. § 245a, to establish mandatory decrees regarding the working conditions of particular industries. These decrees are quasi-legislative documents with the force of law.
Mendoza v. Minimum Wage Board of Puerto Rico,
. The Appellants also erroneously rely on two cases to support their contentions. First, they cite our decision in
Combined Management,
Appellants also offer
Vartanian v. Monsanto Co.,
