This is a class action suit under ERISA complaining about delay in the payment of benefits to which the members of the class were entitled by their employer’s retirement plan. The defendant bank has a defined-contribution retirement plan. The contributions that the employer and the employee make are deposited in an individual account of the employee and he decides how to invest it. When he retires he receives the current market value оf the investments in his account as of the last day of the quarter preceding his retirement. That day is the “settlement date,” and the plan provides that the benefits will be paid to the employee “within a reasonable time after his settlement date, but not later than 60 days after (a) the end of the plan year in which his settlement date occurs, or (b) such later date on which the amount of the payment can be ascertained by the committee [that administers thе plan].” The settlement date is the end of the plan year for a retiring employee, and so, with the exception of the qualification in (b), the plan entitles the employee to receive his benefits within a reasonable time after the settlement date that is not to exceed 60 days.
The bank’s practice is to pay the benefits 45 days after the settlement date and the plaintiffs complain that this is unreasonably long — 'that the bank could easily pay within 3 days. They point out that the plan does not say that the benefits will be paid 45 days, or no more than 60 days, after the settlement date; it says they must be paid within a “reasonable time”— 45 days is nowhere mentioned in the plan itself and 60 days is just the оuter limit. If payment is made after 60 days, the plan cannot defend on the ground that it was reasonable to take longer, unless it can squeeze itself into the exception in (b) for cases in which for some reason it is impossible to dеtermine the value of the employee’s share of the plan on the settlement date, and this is not claimed to be the situation here.
The district court dismissed the suit on the basis of the defendants’ argument that the plaintiffs lack standing to complain under ERISA about this alleged violation of the plan because, when they received the full balance in their retirement ac *497 counts as determined on the settlement date — -which they did, albeit 45 days after that date — they ceased to be participants in the plan. ERISA permits only “a participant or beneficiary ... to recover benefits due to him under the terms of his plan,” ERISA § 502(a)(1)(B), 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B), and only a “participant, beneficiary, or fiduciary” to obtаin (so far as relevant to this case) “appropriate equitable relief ... to redress ... violations [of] the terms of the plan.” § 502(a)(3)(B)(i), 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(3)(B)®.
The term “participant” has been interpreted to include former employees “who have ‘a colorable claim’ to vested benefits.”
Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v. Bruch,
These plaintiffs, however (and the rest of the class, which consists of similarly situated employees of the bank), dо not seek unpaid benefits. Their complaint is that their benefits were not paid in a timely fashion and as a result they lost the time value of the money. They want the interest they could have earned had they been paid the money in a timely fashion and invested it, but interest is not a benefit specified anywhere in the plan, and only benefits specified in the plan can be recovered in a suit under section 502(a)(1)(B). E.g.,
Massachusetts Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Russell,
■ The plaintiffs also sued under section 502(a)(3)(B), however, which authorizes suits to redress plan violations, as distinct from suits to recovеr unpaid benefits. In failing to give any weight to the difference between the language of the two sections, the district court may have been misled by the passage we quoted earlier from
Firestone
—that the “participants” (and, we have аdded, the “beneficiaries”) entitled to sue under ERISA’s enforcement provisions include former employees “who have ‘a colorable claim’ to vested benefits.” The Court was talking about who may bring a suit
for benefits,
not whether someone whо would be entitled to bring such a suit if he were seeking that relief could sue for other relief, which section 502(a)(3)(B) plainly shows he could. See
Varity Corp. v. Howe,
The defendants’ position would have the odd implication that if the settlement date were June 30, 1990, and the bank did not cut a check to the retiring employee until July 1, 1991, the employee would have no redress, since he would have received his full plan benefits, albeit ten months after the last date on which he was entitled tо receive them under the terms of the plan. The violation of the plan would be plain, but there would be no remedy. Yet if, realizing that this was his employer’s policy, the employee had sought an injunction against it before he retirеd — that is, at a time when he was indisputably a participant and beneficiary — he would have been entitled to relief by the second statutory provision that we quoted, section 502(a)(3)(B), or possibly by the first, (1)(B) (see
Massachusetts Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Russell, supra,
ERISA confines the right to relief to participants, beneficiaries, and fiduciaries because they are the classes of person that ERISA is concerned about. The plaintiffs here claim to have been stiffed in their capacity as participants, and since former employees retain participant status, these plaintiffs are within the scope of section 502 — but only if they are seeking
equitable
relief, since the only nonequitable relief authorized by section 502 is a suit for unpaid benefits and we have seen that this suit cannot be so characterized. The plaintiffs argue that they аre seeking restitution of the wrongful gain that the plan obtained by having the interest-free use of money rightfully theirs under the terms of the plan, and that restitution is an equitable remedy. It is not; as explained in another case decided today, it is а legal remedy when sought in a case at law (for example, a suit for breach of contract) and an equitable remedy when sought in an equity case.
Health Cost Controls of Illinois, Inc. v. Washington,
What is more, the plaintiffs are asking in the alternative that the court impress a constructive trust on the interest that the defendants earned on benefits withheld in violation of the terms of the plan. A constructive trust, as we point out in Health Cost Controls, is an equitable remedy commonly sought and granted in cases of unjust enrichment. It operates much like restitution — indeed it is sometimes referred to as a restitutionary remedy, 1 Dobbs, supra, § 4.3, p. 587 — but it is securely equitable because it is never a legal remedy. If A wrongfully appropri *499 ates money or other property belonging to B, the court can order A to hold the property in trust for B. That is the nature of the relief sought by the plaintiffs in this case. Health Cost Controls holds thаt such relief is squarely within the scope of section 502(a)(3)(B).
So the plaintiffs are entitled to maintain this suit after all.
The question on the merits is whether the phrase “within a reasonable time” not to exceed 60 days entitles the plaintiffs to litigate the issue whether the defendants could have paid the benefits due the plaintiffs within a shorter period, perhaps as little as 3 days. As a matter of ordinary language, the plaintiffs have a case. Read literally, the plan grants participants two entitlements: payment within 60 days, no matter how difficult it is for the plan to comply with this deadline (provided only that the amount due the participant as of the settlement date can be calculated then); and payment within the shortest period in which payment would be reasonable. The summary plan description eliminates the second entitlement; but when plan and summary plan description are inconsistent, it is the former that controls unlеss the employee has relied on the latter. Health Cost Controls of Illinois, Inc. v. Washington, supra, at 711-12.
The literal reading of the plan provision would be absurd, however. It would mean that the authors of the plan had invited participants (more realistically, in view of the rather small stakes for any individual employee, class action lawyers) to litigate over how soon within the 60-day period the employer could “reasonably” be required to pay. A searching inquiry into the actual and feasible accounting practices of the plan, into the cost and configuration of alternative software packages for calculating benefits, and into alternative methods electronic and otherwise of transferring funds to participants in the least amount of time would be incited. Although in some settings “within a reasonable time” can be given a pretty definite meaning through the methods of litigation, e.g.,
Savasta v. 470 Newport Associates,
The defendants have not asked us to reach the merits if we disagree (as we do) with their stubborn defense of thе district court’s erroneous jurisdictional rulings. But as in
Anweiler v. American Electric Power Service Corp.,
Modified and Affirmed.
