This appeal raises numerous issues involving the' sale of closely-held stock from a corporation’s owner to its tax-preferred
BACKGROUND
The lengthy briefs and voluminous record obscure that relatively simple facts are germane to each issue on appeal. We first provide a general background and elaborate on the facts as necessary in the following sections. This foreshortening is made easier by the comprehensive opinion of the district court, to which we make repeated reference.
Perez v. Bruister,
An employer desiring to set up an ESOP will execute a written document to define the terms of the plan and the rights of beneficiaries under it. 29 U.S.C. § 1102(a) (1976). The plan document must provide for one or more named fiduciaries “to control and manage the operation and administration of the plan.” Id., § 1102(a)(1). A trust will be established to hold the assets of the ESOP. Id., § 1103(a). The employer may then make tax-deductible contributions to the plan in the form of its own stock or cash. If cash is contributed, the ESOP then purchases stock in the sponsoring company, either from the company itself or from existing shareholders. Unlike other ERISA-covered plans, an ESOP may also borrow in order to invest in the employer’s stock. In that event, the employer’s cash contributions to the ESOP would be used to retire the debt.
Donovan v. Cunningham,
Bruister and Associates, Inc. (“BAI”), was a Mississippi-based Home Service Provider (“HSP”) that installed and serviced satellite-television equipment for its sole client, DirecTV. It set up an ESOP conforming to the above sketch for its employees. In a three-year period from 2002 to 2005, BAI’s owner Herbert C. Bruister (“Bruister”) sold 100% of his BAI shares (also representing 100% of BAI’s outstanding shares) to BAI’s employees through a series of transactions with the ESOP. In all, five transactions occurred, but the first two are time-barred and no longer in dispute. Bruister personally owned the stock sold in these two transactions. The final three transactions closed on December 21, 2004, September 13, 2005, and December 13, 2005. Bruister had by this time transferred his BAI stock to the Bruister Family LLC (“BFLLC”), which he and his wife controlled each as 50% members. The ESOP bought BAI stock from BFLLC for a mix of cash and
Table 1 Transaction Contract Price Cash Down Amount of Note Total Cash (Donnelly Price) Payment from Issued by ESOP Eventually Paid ESOP by ESOP (Down plus Principal & Interest Payments on Notes) 12/21/2004 (100,000 $6,700,000 ($67.00/ $730,000 $5,970,000 $6,815,876.95 shares, 20% share) outstanding BAI stock) 9/13/2005 (789.47 $1,199,999.72 ($76.00/ $1,199,999.72 N/A $1,199,999.72 shares, 3.16% share) outstanding BAI stock) 12/13/2005 (134,710.53 $10,507,421.34 N/A $10,507,421.34 $761,823.63 shares, 26.94% ($78.00/share) ■outstanding BAI stock)
Bruister, Amy O. Smith (“Smith”), and Jonda C. Henry (“Henry”) served as named trustees of the ESOP. Bruister owned BAI and ran it, Smith worked for BAI, and Henry was BAI’s outside CPA.
Perez,
The trustees set the sales price for each transaction based on valuations of BAI’s fair market value (“FMV”) performed by Matthew Donnelly (“Donnelly”). The parties dispute whether Donnelly was truly independent and whether the trustees’ reliance on his valuations was reasonably justified. The plaintiffs’ basic claim is that the valuations were inflated, which caused the ESOP, and therefore BAI’s employees, to pay too much for the BAI stock it bought from BFLLC.
Perez,
The Secretary of the Department of Labor (“Secretary”) brought a civil action on April 29, 2010, raising claims for breach of fiduciary duty under ERISA § 404(a)(1)(A); for engaging in prohibited transactions under ERISA § 406; for failure to monitor (against Bruister in his capacity as a corporate director of BAI) under ERISA § 404(a)(1)(A); and co-fiduciary liability under ERISA § 405. Two plan participants, Joel D. Rader
2
and Vincent Sealy (“Sealy”), filed a civil action raising generally the same claims as the Secretary and seeking relief on behalf of the ESOP as a whole. The cases were consolidated and the district court conducted a 19-day bench trial during which it considered the testimony of 13 live wit
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It also held Bruister alone liable for $1,988,008.67 in prejudgment interest. Id. at 679-81. Of these amounts, the district court held BFLLC jointly and severally liable for $885,065.25 in damages and $390,604.12 in prejudgment interest, or $1,275,669.37 total. Id. at 681. Defendants timely appealed each case, the Secretary cross-appealed on the remedy, and all appeals were consolidated in this Court.
DISCUSSION
I. Sealy’s Standing to Sue on Behalf of the ESOP
ERISA § 409(a), 29 U.S.C. § 1109(a), provides that a fiduciary who breaches a duty “shall be personally liable to make good to such plan any losses to the plan resulting from each such breach ... and shall be subject to such other equitable or remedial relief as the court may deem appropriate.” Both the Secretary and plan beneficiaries like Sealy are authorized to bring a civil action “for appropriate relief under [ERISA § 409].” ERISA § 502(a)(2), 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(2). The Defendants assert that the district court erred by allowing Sealy to pursue a claim on behalf of the ESOP and its beneficiaries without seeking class certification or the court’s affording other safeguards for the absent beneficiaries’ interests.
3
This has been characterized as an issue of Sealy’s standing to sue.
See Bendaoud v. Hodgson,
Sealy’s claims fully overlap those brought by the Secretary, thus Sealy’s individual standing will not affect issues of liability or remedy. The Defendants are, however, laying the groundwork to attack Sealy’s attorneys’ fee claim,
see
ERISA § 502(g), 29 U.S.C. § 1132(g), based on the extent of his contribution to the lawsuit’s prosecution and whether the recovery is for him or for the entire plan and all beneficiaries. That attack is premature
4
and the contentions raised by Defendants to Sealy’s prosecution of his suit are groundless on the facts of this case. The
The theoretically difficult question raised by the Defendants is whether Sealy was required to sue as a class representative, or the court was required to impose safeguards to ensure that all class members are notified, fairly treated, and not disadvantaged by self-interested prosecution of the claims. Although the district court here imposed no such safeguards, this court has implicitly approved the use of class actions to obtain relief for alleged ERISA plan-wide violations.
See, e.g., Bussian v. RJR Nabisco, Inc.,
II. Liability
The plaintiffs pursued liability under two direct theories: breach of the duty of loyalty, ERISA § 404(a)(1)(A), 29 U.S.C. § 1104(a)(1)(A), and engaging in prohibited transactions, ERISA § 406, 29 U.S.C. § 1106. ERISA imposes liability on “[a]ny person who is a fiduciary with respect to a plan who breaches any of the responsibilities, obligations, or duties imposed upon fiduciaries.” ERISA § 409(a), 29 U.S.C. § 1109(a). Bruister, however, raises a threshold question whether he was a fiduciary with respect to the challenged transactions. We review this question first, followed by the liability issues. “[T]he question whether [Defendants] are ERISA fiduciaries is a mixed question of fact and law,” with the factual components reviewed for clear error and the legal conclusions drawn therefrom reviewed de novo.
Reich v. Lancaster, 55
F.3d 1034,
A. Bruister as a Fiduciary
A person assumes fiduciary status in three ways under ERISA: first, as a named fiduciary in the instrument establishing the employee benefit plan, ERISA §§ 402(a)(1) — (2), 29 U.S.C. §§ 1102(a)(1)-(2); second, by becoming a named fiduciary pursuant to a procedure specified in the plan instrument, ERISA § 402(a)(2), 29 U.S.C. § 1102(a)(2); third, as a “functional fiduciary” under the broad authority, control, or advice provisions of ERISA § 3(21)(A), 29 U.S.C. § 1002(21)(A).
Jordan v. Fed. Express Corp.,
Bruister was a named fiduciary of the ESOP, but he abstained from all votes relating to the subject transactions. The district court correctly applied the two hats doctrine to determine whether, notwithstanding his abstention, “Bruister ex-ercisefd] any authority or- control respecting management or disposition of [the ESOP’s] assets” and thus served as a functional fiduciary.
Perez,
The district court applied the law correctly 9 and did not clearly err in finding that Bruister was a fiduciary of the ESOP because he exercised “authority or control respecting management or disposition of its assets.” ERISA § 3(21)(A)(i), 29 U.S.C. § 1002(21)(A)(i).
B. Fiduciary Liability
Bruister and Smith were found to have breached the duties of loyalty and prudence in their conduct with respect to the stock sales and to have engaged in prohibited transactions. We affirm these findings but do not approve, and do not rely on, the additional, derivative liability theory that Bruister failed to monitor the other trustees under ERISA § 404(a)(1)(A), 29 U.S.C. § 1104(a)(1)(A).
10
Co-fiduciary derivative liability under ERISA § 405(a), 29
1. Breach of the Duty of Loyalty
“[A] fiduciary shall discharge his duties with respect to a plan solely in the interest of the participants and beneficiaries and ... for the exclusive purpose of: (1) providing benefits to participants and their beneficiaries; and (ii) defraying reasonable expenses of administering the plan.” ERISA § 404(a)(1)(A), 29 U.S.C. § 1109(a)(1)(A). We have observed that this language “imposes upon fiduciaries a duty of loyalty” to the plan beneficiaries.
Donovan v. Cunningham,
Applying these principles to the trustees, the district court did not clearly err in finding that “[t]he duty of loyalty was breached from start to finish.”
Perez,
Bruister’s and Smith’s arguments challenge the court’s findings, but they are far from sufficient to demonstrate clear error. These Defendants contend that since Don-nelly’s valuations (and thus the price the ESOP ultimately paid) were not inflated compared to the fair market value (“FMV”) calculated by the Defendants’ expert at trial, and since the district court partially accepted their trial expert’s valuation in setting damages, the Defendants did not breach their duty of loyalty by relying on Donnelly’s valuations.
11
This “all’s well that ends well” argument ig-
2. Engaging in a Prohibited Transaction
ERISA forbids a fiduciary to “cause the plan to engage in a transaction, if he knows or should know that such transaction constitutes a direct or indirect ... sale or exchange ... of any property between the plan and a party in interest.” ERISA § 406(a)(1)(A), 29 U.S.C. § 1106(a)(1)(A). The sale of BAI stock from BFLLC to the ESOP was such a transaction, but the prohibited transaction rule does not apply if the sale “is for adequate consideration.” ERISA § 408(e)(1), 29 U.S.C. § 1108(e)(1).
12
This means that “[a]n ESOP may acquire employer securities in circumstances that would otherwise violate Section 406 if the purchase is made for ‘adequate consideration.’ ”
Donovan,
This court holds that “ESOP fiduciaries will carry their burden to prove that adequate consideration was paid by showing that they arrived at their determi
The district court noted as “[c]ru-cial to this case” that “fiduciaries may point to an expert’s guidance as evidence of a good faith investigation.”
Perez,
Bussian’s discussion reflects that ERISA’s § 404 duty of care requires an inquiry into whether the fiduciaries “arrived at their determination of fair market value by way of a prudent investigation in the circumstances then prevailing.”
Donovan,
The district court’s narrow focus on the
“Bussian
factors,”
Perez,
Aside from re-arguing the facts, the Defendants make two more pointed arguments. First, the district court’s findings relating to inaccurate projections substituted its “20/20 hindsight” for Smith’s reasonable views at the time of the transactions. Second, because the district court partially accepted their trial expert’s valuation of the BAI stock when setting damages, and the expert’s value exceeded Don-nelly’s valuation at the time of the sales, the sales were therefore made for “adequate consideration.”
The first argument does not cast doubt on the judgment. The test for adequate consideration is “expressly focused upon the
conduct
of the fiduciaries” in determining the fair market value.
See Donovan,
The second argument fails for several reasons. Principally, it overlooks the
The Defendants did not carry their burden to qualify for the ERISA § 408(e) adequate consideration affirmative defense, hence the transactions between the ESOP and BFLLC were prohibited by ERISA § 406(a)(1)(A).
III. The Equitable Restitution Remedy
The district court noted that “[t]he remedies questions are more difficult than the liability questions.”
Perez,
The district court denied rescission of the BAI stock sales but granted equitable restitution in the amount the ESOP overpaid.
Perez,
The Defendants and the Secretary challenge the district court’s methodology in numerous ways. We review
de novo
the legal issues (such as the conceptual availability of a certain type of remedy like rescission or equitable restitution) and factual issues involving the computation of damages for clear error.
Streber v. Hunt
A. Rescission as a Possible Remedy
The Secretary urges on cross-appeal that rescinding the transactions is the preferred remedy in this case to the extent that the FMV of the BAI stock at the time of the sales cannot be determined with certainty. This fallback remedy seems to be argued on the assumption that the court’s assessment of FMV was flawed, as the Secretary also contends. Rescission is intended to restore the parties to the pre-transactions’ status quo by returning the entire purchase price paid by the ESOP. The Secretary cites only one case in which rescission was ordered.
See Eaves v. Penn,
In any ease, the Secretary’s goal of returning the parties to the position they occupied
prior
to the transactions is dubious. The proper focus should instead be on “losses to the plan resulting from” the Defendants’ breaches of fiduciary duties. ERISA § 409(a), 29 U.S.C. 1109(a). “[I]t is hornbook law that only such damages should be awarded as will place the injured party in the situation it would have occupied had the wrong not been committed.”
Whitfield v. Lindemann,
Further, as will be discussed below, the district court’s computation of the FMV of the BAI stock is not so inherently flawed as to compel rescission in lieu of equitable restitution damages. The district court valued the BAI stock with reasonable certainty. There may be some cases in which rescission is the proper recovery or FMV cannot easily be determined, but this is not one. The district court did not abuse its discretion in denying rescission. 19
“Appraisal of closely held stock is a very inexact science” involving a “level of uncertainty inherent in the process and [a] variety of potential fact patterns.”
Donovan,
1. Consideration of “Hypothetical” Expenses
Messina, the Secretary’s expert, considered BAI’s financial statements unreliable because they did not conform to Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (“GAAP”). To account for this asserted deficiency, Messina used the actual revenue numbers reported on BAI’s financial statements but employed industry average numbers for comparable companies to estimate BAI’s expenses and, therefore, profits.
See Perez,
The Defendants first rely on their expert Range’s opinion that Messina’s methodology is unreliable, but Messina, also a duly qualified expert, testified that his valuation method is acceptable in the absence of reliable financial statements. Citing only
Estate of Jameson v. Comm’r,
Second, the Defendants’ expert himself used a guideline public company valuation method in preparing one of his valuations.
Perez,
Third, Range, like Messina, cautioned in his expert report that BAI’s financial statements contain “known accounting inaccuracies” and “are meant to provide context, and not necessarily actual economic results.”
Perez,
Most important, the effect of any problem in Messina’s methodology was blunted by the district court’s averaging of the experts’ valuations. The district court fully explained that “[averaging the results mitigates the impact of those valuations that seemed less valid
on both sides.” Id.
at 678 (emphasis in original). “We may not view the evidence differently as a matter of choice, or substitute our judgment for a plausible assessment by the trial judge.”
Reich,
2. Consideration of BAI Debt
The Defendants argue that the court erred in failing to make a finding as to BAI’s outstanding debt at the time of each subject stock sale. The three expert witnesses used dramatically different debt numbers in reaching the FMV of BAI at those points in time. The Defendants contend that Range alone based BAI’s figures on evidence in the record, whereas Messi-na and Mercer arrived at their figures for BAI’s debt by looking only at Donnelly’s valuations. Since the district court found Donnelly’s valuations “not credible,”
Perez,
Our review of the record and each expert’s valuation report indicates that Messina and Mercer did not impermissibly rely on Donnelly in arriving at their debt figures. Rather, the record indicates that Mercer used BAI’s debt as reported on its financial statements and Messina adjusted the debt shown on them. Range instead used BAI’s debt amortization schedules. None of these approaches was necessarily incorrect, much less superior. Moreover, the differences in methodology were accounted for by the court’s averaging process. The district court accordingly rendered a “plausible assessment” among them.
22
See Reich,
3. Averaging Expert Valuations
Both the Defendants and the Secretary challenge the keystone of the
The Defendants argue this was error because the district court’s ultimate average valuation was “not presented in evidence.” Apparently, the Defendants would have had the district court accept only one expert’s valuation (presumably Range’s) rather than an average. This argument is meritless. “It is well-settled that the district court is only required to determine the extent of the damages as a matter of just and reasonable inference and that the result need only be approximate.”
In re Liljeberg Ents., Inc.,
The Secretary does not criticize averaging of valuations in all cases, but instead asserts that it is inappropriate here because it “reconciled greatly divergent estimates” among the experts.
Lake Charles,
Finally, the Secretary takes issue with the court’s decision to weigh Range’s values at 50% and Messina’s and Mercer’s at 25% each.
See id.
at 58-59. This was done because “[t]he FMV’s from Mercer and Messina were close, and in the Court’s opinion these low-side numbers should be averaged to avoid skewing the results.”
Perez,
C. Computation of Price
The district court measured the ESOP’s recovery as the difference between the price paid by the ESOP for the stock in the challenged transactions and the company’s FMV on each of those dates. Having discussed the FMV computation, we now turn to issues raised about the price. One might think that the sales price is objectively knowable, but the Defendants pose two fairly sophisticated claims of error.
1. Consideration of Debt Owed by the ESOP but not yet Paid
The December 2004 and December 2005 transactions were each financed with a mix of cash and a loan from BAI to the ESOP.
Perez,
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The Defendants argue that because the ESOP only made cash payments of principal and interest totaling $761,823 on the $10,507,421 loan, it would be a windfall for the ESOP to receive any damages until idle ESOP had paid at least $7,139,658, ie., the price equivalent to the court’s computed FMV. 26
Every court to consider this question has rejected the Defendants’ contention
2. Consideration of'“Mirror Loans”
The December 2004 transaction had a purchase price of $6,700,000. It was consummated with a mix of a cash down payment from the ESOP to BFLLC ($730,000) and a note issued from the ESOP payable to BFLLC ($5,970,000).
Perez,
This restructuring had a favorable tax impact for BAL BAI contributed $3.8M to the ESOP, which immediately repaid $3.8M of the internal loan to BAI on February 28, 2006.
Perez,
It is possible that the ESOP was made better off, at least temporarily, after this transaction because BAI incurred a lower tax liability and the stock retained a correspondingly higher value. The district court, for its part, seemed to “emphasize [ ] the wrong issue,” as it focused on the
We nonetheless reject the Defendants’ argument. Even if the $3.8M payment on the internal loan temporarily made the ESOP economically better off, the theory of harm is that the ESOP overpaid for the BAI stock. The focus should be on these “losses to the plan.” ERISA § 409(a), 29 U.S.C. § 1109(a). The ESOP loses when it pays an inflated price, regardless of immediate tax benefits to the sponsor, because it must repay too much debt. 27 Moreover, the extent to which the tax savings on the deductibility of BAI’s contribution to the ESOP translated into dollar-for-dollar savings to BAI, or to the ESOP’s investment, is dubious. The consequences of one deduction are too remote, given the complexity of today’s tax code, to translate into a measurable effect on damages. We thus reject the Defendants’ argument and hold that the district court did not clearly err by refusing to exclude the $3.8M internal loan payment from the Defendants’ liability based on its alleged tax benefits to ' BAI.
IV. BFLLC’s Joint & Several Liability
ERISA plan participants may assert a cause of action “to obtain other appropriate equitable relief (i) to redress [ERISA violations] or (ii) to enforce any provisions of this subchapter.” ERISA § 502(a)(3), 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(3). This provision authorizes suits against a non-fiduciary “party in interest” to a prohibited transaction barred by ERISA § 406(a), 29 U.S.C. § 1106(a).
See Harris Trust and Sav. Bank v. Salomon Smith Barney, Inc.,
The district court held BFLLC jointly and severally liable with the other Defendants in the amount of $885,065.25 for overpayments plus $390,604.12 in prejudgment interest,
28
or a total of $1,275,669.37.
Perez,
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The Defendants argue the district court made two errors.
A Consideration of Debt Owed by the ESOP but not yet Paid
In a rehash of an argument we have rejected, the Defendants challenge any relief against BFLLC for the December 2004 and December 2005 transactions. They contend that because BFLLC actually received less cash than the contracted-for sales price for each transaction (owing to unpaid ESOP debt), it would be inequitable and/or a windfall for the plaintiffs to recover anything against BFLLC. That BFLLC is a non-party does not affect the damages calculation, however. Further, contrary to the Defendants’ contention, BFLLC’s joint and several liability effects no windfall because the ESOP is not getting anything extra, such as a double recovery. 31 The district court did not clearly err in its allocation of BFLLC’s share of the damages award.
B. Consideration of Interest Paid by the ESOP
The Defendants argue that the district court erred by including interest payments made by the ESOP to BFLLC in its award against BFLLC. They first argue that
all
interest payments received by BFLLC should be excluded from the computation of the award. This argument is clearly wrong, as interest paid on debt is recoverable as damages to the extent that it was wrongly paid due to an inflated purchase price. They alternatively argue that, if
all
interest is not excluded, then only the
excess
interest attributable to the inflated purchase price should be included in the joint and several liability award.
Take as an example the December 2005 transaction, which was 100% debt-financed. The harm to the ESOP is that it overpaid for the BAI stock. It incurred too much debt. The district court found that $7,139,658.09 was the FMV, or proper purchase price, for the BAI stock at issue in that transaction.
Perez,
V. Other Equitable Remedies
A. Prejudgment Interest
This court reviews the decision to award prejudgment interest, the interest rate selected, and other computations for abuse of discretion.
See Hansen v. Cont'l Ins. Co.,
Because there is no ERISA law setting prejudgment interest rates, courts look to state law for that purpose.
See Hansen,
B. Fiduciary Bar
The district court “grantfed] in-junctive relief prohibiting all Defendants from acting in the future as fiduciaries or service providers to ERISA-covered plans, as they have engaged in egregious misconduct.”
Perez,
The Defendants contend that because the amount the ESOP actually overpaid on the BAI stock sales is relatively small (less than a million dollars on each multi-million dollar transaction), they should not incur this injunction. It is not the magnitude of the losses to the ESOP, however, but the nature of the fiduciary (mis)conduct that should principally undergird an injunction.
See Reich,
VI. Concurrent Judgments
The district court entered identical judgments in each consolidated case. The Defendants argue this subjects them to a potential double recovery, and that it was reversible error for the district court to have issued concurrent judgments without specifying that recovery under one offsets
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s judgment, but MODIFY its concurrent judgments into a single judgment that disposes of each consolidated case together.
. See Table 2, supra, for details on how these percentages were computed.
. The immaterial $7.59 difference between our computations and the district court’s order is due to rounding in the percentages.
Notes
. This case actually involves two complementary ERISA plans: the Bruister & Associates Employee Stock Ownership Plan and the Bruister & Associate Eligible Individual Account Plan. Both plans were operated through a single trust. Throughout the litigation, the parties and the district court referred to the plans and the trust collectively as the “ESOP.” We follow that convention.
. Rader is not a party on appeal as his standing was challenged post-trial and the district court did not enter judgment in his favor.
. The district court allowed Rader to do so as well, but he is not a party to this appeal.
. We do not speculate on the extent to which dual prosecution of this by both Sealy and the Secretary, the latter of whom is a public entity charged with using public resources to protect the public, may or should affect Sealy’s entitlement to attorneys' fees.
. The Secretary argues that
Donovan v. Cunningham,
. Bruister argues, based on
Schloegel v. Boswell,
. Johanson plays multiple roles in the story of this litigation. In addition to being Bruister's personal attorney, he was counsel for BAI and represented both in numerous legal engagements.
Perez,
. Johanson was adamant at oral argument that he did not tweak anything, but we are bound by the record before us. Our review of the record does not indicate the district court’s interpretation of the emails is clearly erroneous.
. Bruister also challenges the district court's expressed "trouble” with the lack of independent or professional fiduciaries on the ESOP, and observes correctly they are not required under ERISA. But this is precisely why the two hats doctrine is applied to the potentially "conflicting loyalties” of a non-independent fiduciary.
Martinez,
. The district court held Bruister individually liable for failure as a BAI board member to monitor the other ESOP trustees (Smith and Henry) when he appointed them and knew they breached their duties of loyalty and care.
Perez,
The Fifth Circuit has never recognized this theory of ERISA fiduciary liability. Courts have erroneously construed as an endorsement of the theory one statement that "[l]ia-bility for the failure to adequately train and supervise an ERISA fiduciary arises where the person exercising supervisory authority was in a position to appoint or remove plan
. We discuss the valuation arguments in much greater detail below.
. Two additional requirements for the exception are that no commission is charged and the plan must be an eligible plan. ERISA §§ 408(e)(2)-(3), 29 U.S.C. §§ 1108(e)(2)-(3). Neither is at issue here.
. There is no regulation regarding “adequate consideration." The Secretary proposed, but never finalized, regulations requiring that the value assigned must reflect the stock’s fair market value,
and
the value assigned "must be the product of a determination made by the fiduciary in good faith.” Proposed Regulation Relating to the Definition of Adequate Consideration, 53 Fed.Reg.17,632, 17,633 (proposed May 17, 1988) (to be codified at 29 C.F.R. pt. 2510). The proposed regulation went on to define how each of the two parts are satisfied.
Id.
at 17,637. Proposed regulations are, of course, not binding.
Teweleit v. Hartford Life and Accident Ins. Co.,
. It appears Donovan was the Labor Department's impetus for proposing the regulation. See 53 Fed.Reg. at 17,633 (citing Donovan and noting that the opinion encourages the Department to adopt regulations defining adequate consideration).
. The district court thus made the same mistake we identified earlier,
see supra
note 13, as it cited the Department of Labor’s proposed regulation as the ostensible test then actually applied a different test.
See Perez,
. Notably, the Defendants’ brief rarely even cites the trial record when it attempts to address specific findings by the trial court.
. Bruister and Smith do not expressly raise the "hypothetical prudent fiduciary” concept, which posits that a breach of the duty of prudence may be overcome if their ultimate decision would have been accepted by a “hypothetical prudent fiduciary.” See
Bussian,
. The Secretary cites additional cases under the common law of trusts and other federal laws that simply discuss general principles of rescission.
. Though the Secretary's argument rests primarily upon the indeterminacy of the BAI stock's FMV, he also contends that rescission is appropriate here because the transactions between the ESOP and BFLLC were prohibited transactions under ERISA § 406(a), 29 U.S.C. § 1106(a). While ERISA § 406(a) imposes a general duty upon fiduciaries to avoid prohibited transactions, ERISA’s remedial statute provides that a fiduciary "who breaches any of the responsibilities, obligations, or duties imposed upon fiduciaries” must restore "any losses to the plan” and is also "subject
. The district court averaged Messina’s and Mercer’s very similar figures together to avoid overweighing them.
Perez,
. On a related note, all valuation methods use projections of future income in some form, which would necessarily be ''hypothetical” and not actual information. It is not wrong to rely on these sorts of projections if they are done correctly and have a sound basis.
. The district court was not required to make a separate factual finding concerning the debt figures as long as the district court’s findings "afford the reviewing court a clear understanding of the factual basis for the trial court’s decision.”
Reich,
.Both the Defendants and the Secretary note that Range's expert valuation was higher than Donnelly's initial valuations that the district court rejected,
see Perez,
. The September 2005 transaction was all cash.
. This table combines the two tables in the district court's opinion,
see Perez,
. Though left unsaid, presumably the Defendants mean until the ESOP has paid at least this much just in principal on the acquisition loan, not principal and interest.
. "[T]he employer’s cash contributions to the ESOP” that are used "to retire the debt,”
Donovan v. Cunningham,
. The district court did not indicate how it computed BFLLC's joint and several liability for prejudgment interest, but it clearly was computed by dividing BFLLC’s joint and several share of liability ($885,065.25) by the total liability/overpayment ($4,504,605.30, see Table 2, supra) and multiplying the resulting fraction by its total award of prejudgment interest ($1,988,008.67).
. The Defendants attempt to reframe the windfall argument in their reply brief by arguing the windfall is another judgment debtor to execute against, not the award of damages itself. This court will not consider arguments raised for the first time in a reply brief.
Wright v. Excel Paralubes,
. See supra Table 2.
. At oral argument, we pressed Johanson, the Defendants’ counsel, on whether this rate was appropriate given that prevailing interest rates in the general economy were much lower during the relevant timeframe (2010-2014), a fact of which we take judicial notice. He conceded that it was.
C.f. Perez,
. As a general rule prejudgment interest awards are simple interest awards, not compound interest awards.
See Whitfield,
. The Secretary and Sealy respond by pointing to the Second Circuit's decision in
Beck v. Levering,
