The Retail Food Employers Joint Pension Plan denied Theron McClain pension benefits. McClain sued the Plan and its board of trustees (collectively, “the Plan”) under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (“ERISA”). McClain specifically alleged that the Plan violated ERISA’s standard for handling accrued benefits. The district court granted summary judgment for the Plan. McClain appeals. We affirm.
McClain worked for the National Tea Company for sixteen years, from March 1957 to March 1973. During that period, he participated in the Plan. McClain left National Tea to manage his own retail food store, at which time he terminated his participation in the Plan. Eleven years later, however, McClain went to work for Grace Foods and again became a Plan participant. He continued to participate in the Plan from April 1984 until he left Grace Foods nine years later in April 1993.
At that juncture, McClain began receiving pension benefits from the Plan based upon his service at Grace Foods. In 2001, McClain applied for pension benefits for his time with National Tea, 1 but the Fund denied the application, finding that McClain did not qualify for benefits from the earlier period. According to the Plan, the pension benefits that McClain had accrued while at National Tea never vested because of McClain’s break in service, i.e., the period between his two participation periods, and the corresponding contractual terms of the Plan.
Before further describing the Plan’s denial, it is helpful to distinguish “accrued” from “vested” in this ERISA context. “[Ajccrued benefits refer to those normal retirement benefits that an employee has earned at any given time during the course of employment.”
Vallone v. CNA Fin. Corp.,
McClain was denied benefits based upon § 4.4(e) of the Plan. Under the Plan, pension benefits are based upon an employee’s “eligibility service,” and McClain’s time at National Tea qualified as “eligibility service.” Nonetheless, pursuant to § 4.4(e), if an employee has a “break in service,” all of the “eligibility service” that he accumulated before his break cannot “be counted for purposes of determining his eligibility for a pension benefit.” For periods before January 1, 1976 (i.e., pre-ERISA), § 4.4(a) of the Plan defines a “break in service” as two consecutive calendar years in which the employee had failed to accumulate any *585 “eligibility service.” However, § 4.4(a) negates the ill effects of any such break on the employee if, before the defined break, the employee was “eligible for a pension benefit in accordance with the rules of the Plan then in effect.”
Here, McClain had a defined “break in service” before 1976 because he did not accumulate any “eligibility service” during the two consecutive calendar years of 1974 and 1975. The matter then turns to whether McClain’s pre-break benefits can be saved by § 4.4(a). The rules of the Plan in effect before McClain’s defined 1974-1975 “break in service” — that is, the rules in effect in 1973 — come from the 1966 version of the Plan, as amended in 1972. Under § 5.5 of that version, an employee had to meet two key requirements to become eligible for a pension benefit: (1) his employment terminated on or after his fiftieth birthday and (2) he completed ten or more years of service. Upon satisfaction of these conditions, benefits vested under the Plan. McClain was thirty-three in 1973 when he ended his sixteen years at National Tea. Therefore, while McClain met the second vesting condition, he did not satisfy the first. As a result, McClain’s 1957-1973 accrued benefits did not vest before his “break in service,” and, thus, pursuant to the pertinent Plan provisions, he was not entitled to pension benefits for the pre-break period.
This manner of disregarding service and denying benefits is consistent with ERISA § 203, 29 U.S.C. § 1053, which governs the vesting of benefits. In general, § 203(b)(1) requires a plan to count all of an employee’s years of service for vesting purposes. However, so as not to disturb contractual arrangements in existence before ERISA, § 203(b)(1)(F) provides an exception to the general rule for pre-ERISA breaks in service. This exception allows a plan to disregard years of service before ERISA became applicable to the plan, here 1976, “if such service would have been disregarded under the rules of the plan with regard to breaks in service, as in effect on the applicable date.” 29 U.S.C. § 1053(b)(1)(F). Simply put, the Plan here may disregard McClain’s 1957-1973 service under § 203(b)(1)(F) because that service would have been disregarded under the applicable pre-ERISA rules of the Plan.
Acknowledging this roadblock, McClain did not bring his lawsuit 2 under § 203. Rather, he complains that the Plan’s denial of benefits runs afoul of ERISA § 204, 29 U.S.C. § 1054, which covers accrued benefits. Similar to § 203’s general rule, § 204 — particularly § 204(b)(4)(A) — requires a plan to credit all of an employee’s years of service when determining the amount of the employee’s accrued benefit. See 29 U.S.C. §§ 1054(b)(1)(D) & (b)(4)(A) (cross-referencing 29 U.S.C. §§ 1052(b)(l)-(4)). Nevertheless, unlike § 203, § 204 does not contain a parallel exception for McClain’s situation; it is silent on pre-ERISA breaks in service. See id. McClain therefore reasons that, if, under § 204(b)(4)(A), all of his service must be counted, then the Plan must pay him pension benefits for his ser *586 vice with National Tea — irrespective of § 203(b)(1)(F). The Plan’s failure to do so, argues McClain, violates § 204(b)(4)(A).
Under McClain’s approach, there is a clear conflict between § 203 and § 204. Service that is permissibly disregarded under § 203 could not be disregarded under § 204. We squarely addressed and rejected such inconsistent treatment of pre-ERISA breaks in service in
Jones v. UOP,
Under Jones then, we must analyze McClain’s § 204 claim in conjunction with § 203. Specifically, § 204(b)(4)(A) must be read together with the pre-ERISA break in service exception of § 203(b)(1)(F). As already discussed above, § 203(b)(1)(F) permits the Plan to disregard McClain’s 1957-1973 service since that service would have been disregarded under the applicable pre-ERISA rules of the Plan. Therefore, pursuant to Jones and § 203(b)(1)(F), the Plan’s denial of benefits did not violate § 204(b)(4)(A) as alleged by McClain.
McClain, nevertheless, seeks to have us overturn
Jones.
We require a compelling reason to overturn circuit precedent.
See Debs v. N.E. Ill. Univ.,
McClain attempts to meet the compelling reason standard with two other arguments. First, he points to
McDonald v. Pension Plan of the NYSA-ILA Pension Trust Fund,
Second, McClain cites a Labor Department regulation about accrual rules to support his position, contending that the regulation should be afforded deference in accordance with
Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc.,
Consequently, pursuant to our decision in Jones and § 203(b)(1)(F), the Plan is entitled to summary judgment on McClain’s § 204(b)(4)(A) claim. 4 Under the Plan’s pre-ERISA framework, McClain’s break in service precluded pension benefits for his time with National Tea, and ERISA does not alter that contractual arrangement. The judgment of the district court is Affirmeb.
Notes
. The record and the briefs do not reveal why McClain, who left the Plan for good in 1993, waited until 2001 to submit his application pertaining to his National Tea employment.
. McClain has fashioned this suit as a class action, but, pursuant to an agreement between the parties, the district court adjudicated the Plan's summary judgment motion without making a class certification ruling. Given the dispositive ruling at hand and the fact that the district court did not reserve the certification issue for future determination, the absence of a class certification ruling does not affect our jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
See Harold Wash. Party v. Cook County, Ill. Democratic Party,
.
McDonald
is the only circuit opinion since
Jones
to address the issue. As observed in
Jones
and
McDonald,
the Third and Eighth Circuits have, like
Jones,
read § 204 and § 203 together.
See Jones,
. In his opening appellate brief, McClain also preemptively raised a statute of limitations argument to which the Plan offered no response. As the Plan has abandoned this affirmative defense, it merits no further discussion here.
