MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
THIS MATTER is bеfore the Court on the Defendants’ motions to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction and preemption. The Plaintiffs oppose dismissal and for the reasons stated herein, the motions are denied with minor exceptions.
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Strategic Outsourcing, Inc. (SOI) provides small business owners with personnel administration services, including payroll and tax services and health benefits. Summit Services, Inc. (Summit), which was acquired by SOI in 1997, was in the same business. Both corporations provided health care benefits to their employees in the form of employee welfare benefit plans. From June 1996 through November 1997, Commerce Benefits Group, Inc. (CBG) acted as the third-party administrator for Summit’s employee health insurance plans. During this time period, South Lorain Merchants Association, Inc. (SLMA) provided the health insurance for Summit and Diversified Benefit Plans Agency, Inc. (Diversified) acted as the claims administrator fоr SLMA. Over $1 million in premiums and fees were paid during this period.
When SOI acquired Summit in 1997, CBG proposed that SOI provide health
Plаintiffs allege that CBG and Diversified are both owned and/or controlled by Thomas Patton (Patton). They also allege that CBG, Diversified and SLMA are affiliated. The Plaintiffs became dissatisfied with CBG because the health care claims of its employees were not timely processed or paid and improper denials of coverage were routinely made. Sometime after June 1997, CBG unilaterally and without consent changed the definition of “preexisting condition” in the health care policies. Plaintiffs also paid additional premiums for reinsurance coverage, a contract whereby an insurer transfers all or part of the risk above a certain amount which it underwrites to a different insurer. SLMA agreed to provide this coverage but failed to obtain it; and, in fact, the reinsurance coverage was cancelled. Claiming these and other improper businеss transactions, Plaintiffs initiated this action in December 1997.
II. PROCEDURAL HISTORY
The ease has had a tortured journey through the federal system. The complaint was filed in December 1997 asserting only state law causes of action and was promptly met with motions to dismiss by the Defendants based on lack of personal jurisdiction and preemption by the Employees Retirement Security Income Act (ERISA), 29 U.S.C. §§ 1001, et. seq. In March 1998, a Memorandum and Recommendation was filed by the United States Magistrate Judge recommending the action be dismissed. However, a U.S. District Court Judge later ruled the parties could submit additional pleadings after which the matter would be resubmitted to the Magistrate Judge, thus annulling the Memorandum and Recommendation. In June 1998, a new motion to dismiss based on lack of personal jurisdiction was filed and before responses were due, the case was administratively reassigned to the undersigned. In August 1998, the Plaintiffs were allowed to amend their complaint to state ERISA claims. This resulted in amended answers and renewed motions to dismiss. The motions are now ripe for disposition.
III. DISCUSSION
A. Personal Jurisdiction.
Plaintiffs’ amended complaint alleges fourteen causes of action, four of which are based on ERISA violations. Jurisdiction is alleged to be grounded in both federal question and diversity jurisdiction. Defendants claim there is no personal jurisdiction, an issue which must be considered first, since if there is indeed no personal jurisdiction, the action falls on that basis alone.
When a defendant moves to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction, the plaintiff must “make a
prima facie
showing of a sufficient jurisdictional basis in order to survive the jurisdictional challenge.”
In re The Celotex Corp.,
ERISA provides that “[wjhere an action under this subsection is brought in a district court of the United States, it may be brought in the district where the plan is administered, where the breach took place or where a defendant resides or may be found, and process may be served in any other district court where a defendant resides or may be found.” 29 U.S.C. § 1132(e)(2). Here, the Plaintiffs are foreign corporations with their principal places of business in Charlotte, North Carolina. The corporate Defendants are foreign corporations with thеir principal
The ERISA provision allowing for service of process anywhere within the nation has been interpreted for purposes of personal jurisdiction as a “national contacts test.” “[W]hen a federаl court attempts ‘to exercise personal jurisdiction over a defendant in a suit based upon a federal statute providing for nationwide service of process, the relevant inquiry is whether the defendant has had minimum contacts with the United States[,]’ ” as opposed to the state in which suit is brought.
Bellaire Gen. Hosp. v. Blue Cross Blue Shield,
“Where,” as here, “Congress has authorized nationwide service of process ... so long as the assertion of jurisdiction over the defendant is compatible with due process, the service of process is sufficient to establish the jurisdiction of the federal court over the person of the defendant.” ... [W]hen the defendant is located within the United States, he “must look primarily to federal venue requirements for protection from onerous litigation” because “it is only in highly unusual cases that inconvenience will rise to a level of constitutional concern.”
ESAB Group, Inc. v. Centricut, Inc.,
In addition to the ERISA claims, Plaintiffs have alleged two causes of action for an accounting, four claims based on breach of contract, and claims for fraud, constructive fraud, civil conspiracy and constructive trust. Defendants have moved to dismiss these state law claims on the grounds of preemption.
ERISA preempts “any and all state laws insofar as they may now or hereafter relate to аny employee benefit plan.” 29 U.S.C. § 1144(a). State law includes “all laws, decisions, rules, regulations, or other State action having the effect of law.” 29 U.S.C. § 1144(c)(1). Thus, state common law claims are included within the definition. A state law “relates to an employee benefit plan if it has a connection with, or a reference to, such a plan.”
Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Pettit,
ERISA’s express purpose is to protect interstate commerce and the interests of participants in employee benefit plans and their beneficiaries, by requiring the disclosure and reporting to participants and beneficiaries of financial and other information with respect thereto, by establishing standards of conduct, responsibility, and obligation for fiduciaries of employee benefit plans, and by providing for appropriate remedies, sanctions, and ready access to the Federal courts.... [T]he Supreme Court [has] determined that economic considerations support[ ] Congress’s decision to subject employee benefit plans to only one body of national, uniform law because ERISA would thereby minimize administrative and financial burdens on employers. State laws that obstruct the accomplishment оf these goals must give way to ERISA.
Id. at 862. If a state law, or cause of action, would affect relations between plan entities or impact the administration of a plan, it is preempted. Id.
The broadness of this language has been traditionally interpreted to require ERISA preemption on a wide scale. However, in 1995 the Supreme Court significantly narrowed the scope of ERISA preemption in
New York State Conference of Blue Cross
Turning to the case at hand, Plaintiffs have alleged both ERISA claims and common law claims in the same complaint. The ERISA claims are brought by the corporations as the sponsors of the employee welfare benefit plans and, in the amended complaint, the plans are also named as Plaintiffs. 2 Amended Complaint, at 2. SLMA is alleged to be the sponsor of SLMA Plan, a multiple employer welfare arrangement subject to ERISA. Id., at 3. CBG and Diversified are sued as fiduciaries of the plans. Id., at 20. The relief sought in the ERISA claims is an accounting of the funds received and expended, a restoration to the plans of any commissions unlawfully taken and a payment into the plans of any losses sustained by the plans as a result of the Defendants’ conduct. Id., at 21, 22, 26, 27.
However, in addition to the ERISA claims, Plaintiffs, in their individual capacities, claim the Defendants, in their non-fiduciary capacities, breached the parties’ contracts, defrauded them, and conspired to conceal the fraud. In these claims, Plaintiffs seek relief in thе form of monetary damages to be paid to the corporations, not the plans. The issue then, is whether common law claims sounding in contract and tort brought by the corporations who established the plans are preempted when the employers sue the service providers for failing to timely process and pay claims, overcharging for premiums, refusing to pay valid claims, and failing to obtain reinsurance coverage.
In
Coyne, swpra,
an employer sued the designers of group health insurance plans alleging -claims under ERISA and state law negligence. In finding the negligence claim was not preempted by ERISA, the Fourth Circuit noted the “gravamen of the claim is that the defendants, in their capacities as insurance professionals, negligently failed to obtain a replacement insurance plan for Delany that provided the same coverage аnd benefits as the [prior] policy.... Delany’s state law claim simply does not threaten Congress’s goal of ‘nationally uniform administration of employee benefit plans.’ ”
Coyne,
Quite simply, Delany’s claim is not aimed at a plan administrator at all since the defendants are sued in their capacities as insurance professionals for actions taken in that capacity.... Moreover, the malpractice claim is not aimed at obtaining ERISA benefits. Rather, the claim seeks damages proximately caused by the insurance professionals’ negligent failure to procure the promised replacеment plan. If Delany prevails on its claim, the defendants will be liable in them individual capacities for their negligence as insurance professionals.... Common law imposes the duty of care regardless of whether the malpractice involves an ERISA plan or a run-of-the-mill automobile insurance policy. Thus, the duty of care does not depend on ERISA in any way.
Id.
Defendants claim Coyne turned on the fact that the plans had not been established at the timе of the malpractice. However, the Circuit noted it was “irrelevant that Delany ultimately hired the defendants to serve as Plan Administrator ... after they designed and sold the plan to Delany. The malpractice claim would still exist if Delany had hired someone other than the defendants to serve as Plan Administrator[ ].” Id., at 1471-72. The malpractice occurred when the defendants failed to procure the replacement coverаge, a fact separate and distinct from any administration of the ERISA plan ultimately put into place.
This Court can find no reason to distinguish the tort claims asserted here from those in the
Coyne
case. The Plaintiffs’ claims for fraud, constructive fraud and civil conspiracy are based on the Defendants’ failure to procure reinsurance coverage. Reinsurance coverage does not provide insurance benefits for thе plan participants but instead is in the nature of excess liability coverage for the employer and, as such, falls outside the scope of both the plan and ERISA.
See, e.g., Thompson v. Talquin Bldg. Products Co.,
Plaintiffs’ breach of contract claims are also asserted in their individual capacities. The fourth cause of action alleges that CBG failed to properly manage the Summit Plan, failed to timely process and pay claims, overcharged Summit for рremiums and refused to pay claims. The fifth claim alleges that the Defendants improperly denied and delayed claims of Summit employees. The ninth and tenth claims make the same allegations against CBG in connection with SOI’s plan but adds the additional claim that CBG failed
Therefore, the only remaining claims are for an accounting and constructive trust. The relief sought in the claim for an accounting is redundant to the ERISA claims and will of necessity be granted if the Plaintiffs succeed on their ERISA claims. Amended Complaint at 21, 22, 26, 27. The claim for a constructive trust is so intertwined with plan interpretation that it may not proceed.
IY. ORDER
IT IS, THEREFORE, ORDERED that the Defendants’ request for a hearing on their motions is hereby DENIED; and
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the Defendants’ motions to dismiss and renewed motions to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction are hereby DENIED; and
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the Defendants’ motiоns to dismiss for lack of standing are hereby DENIED.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the Defendants’ motions to dismiss and renewed motions to dismiss on the grounds of preemption are ALLOWED as to the claims for accounting and constructive trust and ALLOWED IN PART as to the claims for breach of contract as set forth herein; otherwise, the motions are DENIED.
The Clerk of Court is hereby instructed to schedule forthwith the initial pretrial conference before the undersigned.
Notes
. Moreover, even under thе minimum contacts standard, the Court would find personal jurisdiction established. First, the North Carolina long-arm statute authorizes the exercise of jurisdiction and second, that exercise comports with Fourteenth Amendment due pro
. CBG claims Plaintiffs lack standing to bring the ERISA claims. The Court finds under the facts as alleged in the complaint that the Plaintiffs as sponsors retained authority to amend the plan in order to remove the plan administrator and thus, has standing to bring ERISA claims.
Coyne,
