Case Information
*1 Before: MARTIN, COLE, and GILMAN, Circuit Judges.
_________________
COUNSEL ARGUED: Bobby R. Burchfield, McDERMOTT, WILL & EMERY, Washington, D.C., Stephanie J. Goldstein, FRIED, FRANK, HARRIS, SHRIVER & JACOBSON, New York, New York, for Defendants. Roger J. McClow, KLIMIST, McKNIGHT, SALE, McCLOW & CANZANO, Southfield, Michigan, for Plaintiffs. ON BRIEF: Bobby R. Burchfield, Jason A. Levine, Douglas G. Edelschick, McDERMOTT, WILL & EMERY, Washington, D.C., Stephanie J. Goldstein, FRIED, FRANK, HARRIS, SHRIVER & JACOBSON, New York, New York, Thomas G. Kienbaum, Noel D. Massie, William B. Forrest III, KIENBAUM, OPPERWALL, HARDY & PELTON, Birmingham, Michigan, Norman C. Ankers, HONIGAN, MILLER, SCHWARTZ, AND COHN, Detroit, Michigan, for Defendants. Roger J. McClow, Samuel C. McKnight, KLIMIST, McKNIGHT, SALE, McCLOW & CANZANO, Southfield, Michigan, for Plaintiffs.
_________________
OPINION
_________________
BOYCE F. MARTIN, JR., Circuit Judge. The plaintiffs in these four consolidated appeals are retirees or surviving spouses of the J.I. Case Company or the Case Corporation, and they seek fully funded lifetime retiree health care benefits from the defendants. The district court found that the plaintiffs demonstrated a likelihood of success on the merits and entered a preliminary injunction requiring the continued payment of the health care benefits. In three of the consolidated appeals, the underlying issue is whether the retirement health care benefits vested for life. We conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion in determining that the plaintiffs are likely to succeed on their claim that their health care benefits are fully vested for life. So concluding, we turn to the question presented in the fourth consolidated appeal, and hold that the district court correctly determined that the contract between El Paso and CNH America unambiguously allocates the full cost of those benefits to El Paso. We therefore AFFIRM the district court’s judgment in all respects.
I.
In their complaint, the plaintiffs alleged two counts against the defendants: (1) breach of labor agreements in violation of Section 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. § 185, by requiring the plaintiffs to contribute premiums to maintain their retiree or surviving spouse health care benefits, and (2) breach of fiduciary duties under the various labor agreements which constitute employee welfare plans within the meaning of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, 29 U.S.C. § 1001 et seq .
The defendants are El Paso Tennessee Pipeline Company and CNH America, LLC. JI Case, not a party to the dispute, was established in 1842 and became a wholly owned subsidiary of Tenneco (now El Paso) in 1970. JI Case remained a wholly owned subsidiary of Tenneco until 1994 when Tenneco underwent a reorganization and decided to spin off its own and JI Case’s agriculture and construction business assets. Tenneco therefore formed a new corporation, Case Equipment Corporation, and pursuant to a Reorganization Agreement, transferred these assets to Case Equipment. Included was all of the JI Case business (defined as the farm and construction equipment business of Tenneco) except for Tenneco’s JI Case stock, certain demand notes and subordinated debt, as well as the Retained Assets and Retained Liabilities. Case Equipment was then spun off on July 1, 1994, in an initial public offering of its shares. Case Equipment then changed its name to Case Corporation, then to Case, LLC, and is now known as CNH America. [2] In 1996, Tenneco merged with a subsidiary of El Paso Natural Gas Company and is now known as El Paso Tennessee Pipeline Company.
The International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Workers of America (UAW) represented JI Case employees in collective bargaining. Over the years, UAW and JI Case negotiated a number of collective bargaining agreements (CBAs). UAW and JI Case also negotiated a series of Group Insurance Plans which addressed group insurance benefits for various categories of employees and former employees. The CBAs between UAW and JI Case from 1971 forward contain the following language in Section 4A with respect to the Group Insurance Plans: “The group insurance plan agreed to between the parties will run concurrently with this Agreement and is hereby made a part of this Agreement.” In Section 4C the CBA states: “The pension plan agreed to between the parties will run concurrently with this Agreement and is hereby made part of this Agreement.” In 1974, JI Case agreed to pay the full cost of health care benefits for retirees and eligible surviving spouses regardless of age. Under the section “Contribution for Coverage,” the plan states that “the Company shall pay the full premium cost of the above coverages.” The language of the Group Insurance Plans remained substantially unchanged through 1990.
Over the years, Metropolitan Life Insurance Company prepared benefit booklets describing insurance benefits provided under the Group Policy contracts between JI Case and Metropolitan. These booklets included language that “it is hoped that the Group Policies will be continued indefinitely through the years, but your employer necessarily reserves the right, subject to the applicable provisions of the Labor Agreement [CBAs], to terminate or change the Plan in the future.”
The 1990 Agreement is the CBA under which the plaintiffs retired. The 1990 CBA was effective from June 2, 1990 through October 2, 1993. On November 5, 1993, however, JI Case and UAW entered into an Extension Agreement that extended the 1990 CBA through February 2, 1995. In Section 9 of the Extension Agreement, JI Case and UAW agreed to adopt, effective on October 3, 1993, a Letter of Agreement (“the FAS-106 Letter”) that appears to cap JI Case’s liability for certain health care benefits. The Letter states:
This will confirm our understanding that the average per capita annual cost to the Company of providing medical and related benefits under the Case Group Benefit Plan to retired employees and surviving spouses of deceased employees shall not exceed $2,750 for Medicare eligible individuals and $8,500 for those individuals who are not eligible for Medicare. Notwithstanding the foregoing, no covered person shall be required to pay a portion of any excess amount prior to April 1, 1998.
The parties dispute the effect of this letter.
On June 23, 1994, pursuant to Tenneco’s transfer of its and Case’s farm and construction equipment assets to Case Equipment, Tenneco, JI Case, and Case Equipment signed a number of agreements, including a Reorganization Agreement and an Employee Benefits and Compensation Allocation Agreement. As part of the agreement, Tenneco assumed “Retained Liabilities” and agreed to “pay, perform and discharge in due course all of the Retained Liabilities.” The agreement defines “Retained Liabilities” as: “[T]he Case Liabilities for postretirement health and life insurance benefits (to the extent that Case is obligated on the Reorganization Date [June 23, 1994]) of retirees of the Case Business in the United States and current employees of the Case Business in the United States who retire on or before July 1, 1994 and their dependents as more fully described in the benefits agreement.” Tenneco further agreed to indemnify Case Equipment “from and against any and all Liabilities, and any claims, demands and rights of the [Case Equipment] Indemnitees arising out of or due to . . . the failure or alleged failure of Tenneco or any Tenneco subsidiary to pay . . . any of the Retained Liabilities . . .” Section 7.2.2 of the agreement further provides that Tenneco will “retain all liability with respect to postretirement health and life insurance benefits to the extent that Case is obligated on the Closing Date for United States employees retired prior to the Closing Date and their Dependants.” Section 7.4 provides a limitation on Tenneco’s responsibility:
Tenneco shall not be liable for any postretirement health and life insurance benefit costs which result from any action of [Case Equipment] after the Closing Date which increases such benefits, except to the extent that such benefit increases are required by applicable law. To the extent that Tenneco is not liable for such benefits, [Case Equipment] shall be liable. Without limiting the generality of the foregoing, it is specifically provided that Tenneco shall not be liable for any increase in the cost of providing postretirement health and life insurance benefits that result from any agreement by [Case Equipment] to increase or otherwise modify the per capita annual cost limits set forth in [the FAS-106 Letter].
Case LLC assumed the existing CBAs between JI Case and the UAW.
After the Reorganization, Case LLC continued to operate the same farm and construction business that JI Case had under the same management, at the same locations, with the same equipment, with the same supervision, producing the same products, with the same employees, working under the same CBAs. Tenneco then began paying the full cost of the plaintiffs’s health care benefits in 1994. In November 1996 Tenneco sent a letter to its retirees advising them of its impending merger with El Paso and advising those individuals who retired from JI Case that their health care benefits would be maintained by El Paso after the merger. On October 27, 1997, El Paso sent a letter to the plaintiffs informing them that they would be required to contribute $56 per month for health care coverage as of April 1, 1998. El Paso based this requirement on the FAS-106 Letter.
In the meantime and as part of negotiations for a new CBA, UAW asked Case LLC to pay the $56 per month contribution that El Paso sought from pre-IPO retirees for their health care coverage. Case LLC agreed to pay the contributions “as a show of good will toward the UAW,” but insisted that it had no legal obligation to pay for the health care benefits. On October 1, 1998, Case LLC and the UAW entered into the Voluntary Employee Beneficiary Association Agreement whereby both Case LLC and UAW agreed “to make deposits of specified amounts in trust to be applied to defray partially the cost of medical benefits in excess of the Cap under El Paso’s medical plan for Pre-IPO Retirees and Surviving Spouses . . .”
Case LLC then informed pre-IPO retirees and surviving spouses that it would pay their $56 per month premium through the end of 1998. In the summer of 2002, the funds contributed by UAW and Case LLC were exhausted. UAW asked Case LLC and El Paso to make additional contributions to fund the above-cap health care insurance costs for pre-IPO retirees; they both refused. In August 2002, El Paso sent a letter to pre-IPO retirees informing them that they would need to contribute $290 per month in order to continue receiving retiree health care benefits. In December, El Paso sent another letter to the effect that premiums would increase to $501 per month as of January 2003. The plaintiffs filed this lawsuit on December 23, 2002. Subsequently, in October 2003, El Paso informed retirees that the monthly contribution would increase to $561 as of January 2004.
On December 31, 2003, the district court granted the plaintiffs’s motion for a preliminary
injunction, concluding that the plaintiffs were likely to succeed on their claim that CNH America
was obligated to provide fully paid, lifetime health care benefits.
Yolton v. El Paso Tennessee
Pipeline Co.
,
II.
The first issue for our consideration is whether the district court abused its discretion when it concluded that the plaintiffs were likely to succeed on their claim that their retirement health care benefits are vested. We conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion because the CBAs demonstrate an intent to vest the benefits. Because we conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion when issuing the injunction, we must determine whether the district court erred in granting CNH America summary judgment on its cross-claim that El Paso is liable for the full cost of the plaintiffs’s health care benefits. We conclude that the contract was unambiguous, and the district court correctly granted summary judgment in favor of CNH America.
III.
A. The Standard of Review is Abuse of Discretion
This Court reviews a district court’s grant of a preliminary injunction for an abuse of
discretion.
Tucker v. City of Fairfield
,
To determine whether to grant a preliminary injunction, a district court must consider:
“(1) the plaintiff’s likelihood of success on the merits; (2) whether the plaintiff may suffer
irreparable harm absent the injunction; (3) whether granting the injunction will cause substantial
harm to others; and (4) the impact of an injunction upon the public interest.”
Deja Vu of Nashville,
Inc. v. Metro. Gov’t of Nashville & Davidson County
,
B. The district court did not abuse its discretion in this case.
The district court considered each of the four factors listed above when issuing the
preliminary injunction. The defendants primarily challenge the district court’s findings on the first
factor — that is, the court’s determination that the plaintiffs are likely to succeed on the merits. The
plaintiffs are likely to succeed on the merits if they can prove that they have a vested right to the
insurance benefits they claim. “To prove this, the plaintiffs must show that the defendant and the
union intended to include a right to lifetime benefits when they negotiated the CBAs at issue.”
Golden
,
A retiree health care insurance benefit plan is a welfare benefit plan under ERISA.
Maurer
v. Joy Tech., Inc.
,
The district court applied this Court’s decision in
UAW v. Yard-Man, Inc.
,
Part of the
Yard-Man
decision has generated controversy. Examining the context of the CBA
negotiations, the Court wrote that “it is unlikely that [life and health insurance benefits], which are
typically understood as a form of delayed compensation or reward for past services, would be left
to the contingencies of future negotiations.”
Yard-Man
,
This is not to say that retiree insurance benefits are necessarily interminable by their
nature. Nor does any federal labor policy . . . presumptively favor the finding of
interminable rights to retiree insurance benefits when the collective bargaining
agreement is silent. Rather, as part of the context from which the collective
bargaining agreement arose, the nature of such benefits simply provides another
inference of intent.
Standing alone, this factor would be insufficient to find an intent
to create interminable benefits
. In the present case, however, this contextual factor
buttresses
the already sufficient evidence of such intent
in the language of the
agreement itself.
(emphasis added). Later cases further clarified the inference. Shortly after
Yard-Man
, this Court
stated that “there is no legal presumption based on the status of retired employees.”
Int’l Union,
United Auto. Workers v. Cadillac Malleable Iron Co.
,
of the
Yard-Man
inference. El Paso even suggests that this panel should overrule
Yard-Man.
Aside
Both El Paso and CNH America devote a great deal of energy to disputing the correctness
from a panel’s lack of authority to do so, these concerns are significantly overstated. El Paso and
CNH America misinterpret the term “inference” and confuse it with a legal presumption. Under
Yard-Man
we may
infer
an intent to vest from the context and already sufficient evidence of such
intent. Absent such other evidence, we do not start our analysis presuming anything. If
Yard-Man
required a
presumption
, the burden of rebutting that presumption would fall on the defendants.
However, under
Yard-Man
, “[t]here is no legal presumption that benefits vest and that the burden
of proof rests on plaintiffs.”
Maurer
,
Furthermore, there is no indication that the district court applied either a presumption or
relied unnecessarily on the
Yard-Man
inference. Citing
Yard-Man
, the district court correctly stated
that “courts must apply basic rules of contract interpretation to discern the intent of the parties.”
Yolton
,
The defendants counter this finding by pointing to the durational clause in the CBA, which states in section 4A that the insurance plan “will run concurrently with [the CBA] and is hereby made part of this Agreement.” The defendants argue that this is clear and explicit language that demonstrates that the health insurance benefits were not intended to vest and were only to last as long as the CBA. Thus, every time a CBA expires, the company would be free to modify benefits until another CBA is agreed to. Stated another way, retiree’s health insurance coverage is subject to change every few years based on new bargaining agreements.
The district court did not abuse its discretion in rejecting the defendants’s arguments for two
reasons. First, as the district court found, “a number of courts have held that such general durational
provisions only refer to the length of the [CBAs] and not the period of time contemplated for retiree
benefits.”
Yolton
,
That reasoning as applied to the agreements before us means that the concurrent language does nothing to those employees who have already retired under the plan. The durational language only affects future retirees — that is, someone who retired after the expiration of a particular CBA would not be entitled to the previous benefits, but is rather entitled only to those benefits newly negotiated under a new CBA. Thus, the retirement package available to someone contemplating retirement will change with the expiration and adoption of CBAs, but someone already retired under a particular CBA continues to receive the benefits provided therein despite the expiration of the agreement itself. [6]
Second, section 4C of the CBA states that “The pension plan agreed to between the parties
will run concurrently with this agreement and is hereby made part of this Agreement.” The plaintiffs
point to this language as strongly supporting their argument that the retirement benefits are vested.
This is because pension benefits are vested benefits. There is no suggestion that a retiree’s pension
plan is subject to change under each new CBA. The plaintiffs assert, therefore, that because pension
plans are vested benefits and because the CBA uses the same durational language for pension plans
that it uses for the health care benefits, the health care benefits also must be vested benefits. They
argue that the agreements would not use the same language in sections 4A and 4C if it had different
meanings. This argument further bolsters the interpretation noted above that the expiration of a
CBA affects only future retirees in the context of benefits. Reviewing “each provision in question
as part of the integrated whole,” the use of similar language in sections 4A and 4C provides
substantial support for the plaintiffs’s position.
Yard-Man
,
In response to the defendants’s arguments, the district court distinguished the language in
this case from the plans at issue in
UAW v. Cleveland Gear Corp.
,
Likewise, the agreements in
Bittinger
were devoid of any language that tied health insurance
benefits to pension benefits. The defendants rely on
Bittinger
principally because the Summary Plan
Descriptions in
Bittinger
reserved to the company the “absolute right, through the collective
bargaining process, to amend, modify, or discontinue any or all of the benefits described in the
[labor agreement] or the [health care plan] . . .”
Bittinger
,
Regarding the Summary Plan Descriptions from the post-1980 agreements, the district court noted that they no longer included the reservation language, but rather a “Cessation of Benefits” provision stating that coverage will cease if the plan is cancelled in whole or in part. Id . The Cessation of Benefits refers to “the Sections of this booklet entitled ‘Retirement’ and ‘Termination of Coverage,’” where there is no “Cessation of Benefits” provision. Id. “Rather this section, like the Group Insurance Plan, only ties the continuation of retirement benefits to the retiree’s or surviving spouse’s eligibility for pension benefits: ‘Employees who retire under the J.I. Case Pension Plan for Hourly Paid Employees, or their surviving spouses eligible to receive a spouse’s pension under the provisions of that plan, will be eligible for the benefits described in this section.’” Id. Further, this section provides that: “Except where noted, the benefits and maximums under these continued coverages will be the same as those that were in effect on the day preceding your retirement. ” Id. (emphasis added).
Finally, while the plain language of the CBAs requires us to conclude that the district court
did not abuse its discretion by issuing the injunction, we also note that like the
Golden
case,
“[d]efendant’s conduct also indicates that plaintiffs’[s] benefits were vested.”
Golden
, 845 F. Supp.
at 415. The district court identified substantial evidence indicating an understanding that the health
insurance benefits were lifetime benefits. This evidence includes statements from Case benefits
employees that they were told and in turn told retiring employees “that their medical insurance
benefits would continue unchanged for their lifetime . . .”
Yolton
,
On the other side, the defendants presented the testimony of Case’s chief union negotiator and the former Director of Employee Benefits who stated that the company understood benefits to last only as long as the CBAs were in effect and that benefits were not fixed. Id. at 470. The district court rejected this testimony finding that it was not entitled “to considerable weight” because the union negotiator is still employed by Case and the former director receives $20,000 per month in consulting fees from the company. Id. at 471.
The most relevant extrinsic evidence the defendants present is evidence that during the negotiations that led to the FAS-106 Letter, UAW asked to add “lifetime” language to the Letter which was rejected by the company. The defendants argue that this demonstrates that the parties understood that the benefits were not vested. The district court rejected this argument, finding that it “does not necessarily mean that the union’s representatives believed that the earlier agreements did not provide vested health care benefits. The representatives may have been attempting to more clearly state what they believed earlier agreements provided, particularly where the ‘agreement’ at issue established other limitations on those benefits.” As the injunction issued by the district court is a preliminary injunction, the defendants may continue to press their arguments below, but we do not find them sufficient to demonstrate that the district court abused its discretion in this case. For all of the reasons discussed, the district court did not abuse its discretion by concluding that the plaintiffs were likely to succeed on the merits of their claim that they were entitled to fully funded lifetime health care benefits.
None of the parties’s briefs contest the additional inquiries in the preliminary injunction context, and we find the district court’s conclusions sound. The district court found that the plaintiffs would suffer irreparable harm without the injunction. Id. at 471-72. The court pointed to the limited and fixed incomes of the retirees, resulting in an inability to meet the expense of the premiums or resulting in retirees being unable to afford prescriptions or doctor visits. Id. Additionally, the court noted that to receive any health insurance benefits, El Paso was requiring the plaintiffs to contribute $501 per month . Accordingly, “the Court can surmise that the putative class members overall cannot afford to contribute such an amount until this case is resolved. Unable to afford the $501 premium, Plaintiffs will lose their health insurance, will not be able to pay for necessary prescription medications, and will not receive all of the medical care they need. Reimbursing Plaintiffs for their contributions at the end of the case, therefore, will not afford them relief.” Id. at 472.
The district court also found that while the injunction will place a substantial expense on the defendants, this factor did not weigh heavily against the injunction. at 473. According to the district court, “Defendants have paid the full costs of health care benefits for retirees and their surviving spouses for years prior to August 2002, and in this Court’s opinion, the financial impact on Defendants being required to continue to pay these benefits is far less than the financial burden which would be placed on Plaintiffs if their request for a preliminary injunction is denied.” Id. Finally, the district court found that the injunction supports the public interest in enforcing CBAs and preventing ERISA and LMRA violations.
We therefore conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion by issuing the injunction. Prior cases of this Court have highlighted factors indicating an intent to vest benefits that were present in this case. Additionally, we believe that the district court correctly interpreted the plain language of the CBAs and Group Insurance Plans as well as the agreement as a whole. The language tying health care benefits to pension benefits and the context of the bargaining demonstrate an intent to provide lifetime benefits. Furthermore, we do not believe that the general durational language in the CBA limits the duration of the health care benefits themselves, but rather merely provides a limitation on the agreement itself. The use of identical language in the CBAs referring to pension benefits and health care benefits provides strong additional support that the benefits are tied together and that they are lifetime benefits. Even if the agreements were ambiguous, the extrinsic evidence cited by the district court would support its finding and would not lead to the conclusion that the district court abused its discretion in issuing the injunction.
C. Whether El Paso or CNH America is Liable for the Health Care Benefits The remaining dispute is between El Paso and CNH America. Each contends that the other is liable for the plaintiffs’s health insurance benefits above the apparent cap imposed by the FAS- 106 Letter. CNH America contends that El Paso, as Tenneco’s successor, is solely responsible for all of the plaintiffs’s health care benefits. El Paso argues that in the 1994 Reorganization Agreement it assumed liability for pre-IPO retiree health care benefits subject to the negotiated cap set forth in the FAS-106 Letter; thus, according to El Paso, CNH America is liable for costs in excess of the cap.
Initially, in its opinion issuing the preliminary injunction, the district court found that El Paso
is primarily liable for the entire health care costs for pre-IPO retirees and their surviving spouses.
Yolton
,
Following the district court’s opinion, El Paso filed a motion for reconsideration pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b). In ruling on the motion in an opinion issued on March 8, 2004, the district court noted that its original conclusion that El Paso was primarily liable was based on the 1994 Reorganization Agreement. In its motion for reconsideration, El Paso argued that it was premature to resolve the issue of whether El Paso was required to indemnify CNH America for the health insurance benefits without providing El Paso the opportunity to address the issue and without fully resolving CNH America’s liability for the costs as signatory to the relevant CBAs.
The court concluded “that El Paso is entitled to relief, as the Court erred in overlooking the fact that, as the signatory to the CBAs, [CNH America] retained liability for Plaintiffs’[s] health care costs despite El Paso’s subsequent assumption of those liabilities in the Reorganization Agreement and Benefits Agreement.” D. Ct. Op. of March 8, 2004 at 3. To reach this conclusion, the district court needed to address whether CNH America is a party to the CBAs — in essence, whether CNH America is the alter ego of JI Case.
CNH America’s position is that it did not exist before July 1, 1994 when Case LLC it was created by JI Case executives; having not existed until this time, CNH America claims, it could not possibly have been a party to the CBAs signed before this date. CNH America further asserts that it is not the alter ego or successor of JI Case. The district court disagreed and found that CNH America is the alter ego or mere continuance of JI Case and therefore assumed the CBAs and their liabilities.
As the district court correctly noted, the Supreme Court has held that a successor corporation
generally is not liable for its predecessors liabilities unless expressly assumed.
See e.g.
,
NLRB v.
Burns Int’s Sec. Servs.
,
This Court has applied these principles in several relevant cases. To start, “[w]hether a
company or individual is responsible for the financial obligations of another company or individuals
is a question of federal law when it arises in the context of a federal labor dispute. Although state
law cases may provide guidance in fashioning the content of federal law, they are not binding and
thus do not control” the analysis.
NLRB v. Fullerton Transfer & Storage Limited, Inc.
, 910 F.2d
331, 335 (6th Cir. 1990). This Court recognized, however, that federal law, like state law, generally
recognizes the concept of limited liability. As the Supreme Court has stated, “[t]he insulation of a
stockholder from the debts and obligations of his corporation is the norm, not the exception.”
NLRB
v. Deena Artware, Inc.
,
Fullerton Transfer,
the case upon which CNH America relies, asked “which doctrine referred
to as an ‘alter ego doctrine’ applies to this case.”
Id.
at 366. “The alter ego doctrine was developed
to prevent employers from evading obligations under the Act merely by changing or altering their
corporate form.”
NLRB v. Allcoast Transfer, Inc.
, 780 F.2d 576, 579 (6th Cir. 1986). Quite
correctly, the Court recognized that the term alter ego “has accumulated a great deal of baggage in
the context of labor disputes.”
Fullerton Transfer
,
In Fullerton Transfer , however, the Court declined to apply the more relaxed alter ego doctrine because it found that the facts before it did not present a case where the alleged alter egos are “engaged in the same business as the original company . . . Rather, they are, respectively, a corporation engaged in a different business and stockholders and officers of another corporation.” Id. at 337. Consequently, the Court determined that the rationales justifying application of the relaxed standard were absent. Id.
The facts here, however, indicate that the more relaxed standard is appropriate. CNH America argues otherwise; particularly, CNH America argues that the so-called relaxed doctrine applies only to situations where there is evidence of an intent to avoid labor obligations. It points to Fullerton Transfer in support of its claim, but the language of Fullerton Transfer is not helpful. All that Fullerton Transfer stands for is the conclusion that the relaxed standard was not appropriate for the particular facts of that case.
Furthermore, post-
Fullerton Transfer
cases repudiate CNH America’s claim.
See e.g.
,
Wilson v. Int’l Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen and Helpers of Am., AFL-
CIO
,
We conclude that the district court applied the appropriate standard. The court asked
“whether the two enterprises have substantially identical management, business purpose, operation
equipment, customers, supervision and ownership.” D. Ct. Op. of May 8, 2004 (citing
Allcoast
Transfer
,
Other factors indicate that CNH America is, for purposes of this case, the alter ego of JI Case. The Reorganization Agreement was signed for Case Equipment by Jean Pierre Rosso as its President and CEO. D. Ct. Op. Of May 8, 2004 at 6. At the time, Mr. Rosso was also the president and CEO of JI Case. Id. Prior to the Reorganization, Mr. Rosso, as the president and CEO of JI Case, sent a letter to retirees announcing that “[t]he leadership of Case and Tenneco have announced an action that, when completed, will make Case a publicly traded company.” Id. The Reorganization Agreement was signed for JI Case by Theodore R. French, its Senior Vice President, CFO, and Treasurer. Id. at 6-7. Mr. French then held the same position with Case Equipment and in fact signed the Benefits Agreement as Senior Vice President, CFO, and Treasurer of Case Equipment and JI Case. Id.
A few days after the Reorganization Agreement was executed, JI Case executed a Certificate of Amendment, effective July 1, 1994 at 12:01 a.m., changing its name to Tenneco Equipment Corporation. Id. at 7. Effective at 12:02 a.m., Case Equipment changed its name to Case Corporation. Id. “The same individual, acting in the same capacity for the new and old Case Corporations, executed both certificates.” Id.
The district court also found that those individuals who were officers of JI Case prior to 12:01 a.m. on July 1, 1994, were the same individuals named as officers of Case Corporation at 12:02 a.m. Id. The new Case Corporation (Case LLC and then CNH America) operated under the same name as JI Case in the same manufacturing facilities with the same officers, employees, and business. Id. The new Case Corporation continued to correspond with retirees of JI Case using the same JI Case letterhead previously used by the old corporation. Id. at 7-8. “The letters from the new Case Corporation were signed by the same employees, working at the same locations, and in the same positions as the letters from the old Case Corporation.” at 8.
The Benefits Agreement included a provision that, except as otherwise specifically stated within the agreement, CNH America assumed and agreed to pay “all employment, compensation and benefit liabilities, whether arising prior to or after [the date of the agreement], with respect to all employees and former employees of [each subsidiary of Tenneco that assigned assets used in the farm and construction business to Case Corporation].” Furthermore, CNH America assumed all CBAs covering employees of the farm and construction equipment business of JI Case, including the 1990 CBA. Id .
Based on the above factors, the district court concluded that the plaintiffs were likely to establish that CNH America is the alter ego of JI Case and therefore retained JI Case’s labor law obligations. The court further concluded, however, that the plaintiffs were not likely to succeed in their claim against El Paso regarding the labor law obligations because Tenneco was never a party to any CBAs. Thus, the district court concluded that the plaintiffs “will not likely succeed in establishing that El Paso is obligated under those agreements to pay the costs of Plaintiffs’[s] health insurance benefits.” at 9 (emphasis in original) (citing Serv., Hosp., Nursing Home & Pub. Employees Union v. Commercial Property Servs., Inc. , 755 F.2d 499, 503 (6th Cir. 1985) (concluding that non-signatory to a CBA who is neither a successor or alter ego of signatory to the CBA cannot be bound by the provisions of the agreement)).
Finally, the district court noted that it may ultimately be correct in its initial conclusion that El Paso assumed CNH America’s obligations to provide the benefits in the Reorganization Agreement, but noted that the plaintiffs do not seek relief based upon the Reorganization Agreement. Instead, El Paso’s liability arises only as a result of CNH America’s cross-claim against El Paso for breach of those agreements. Therefore, the court concluded it was premature to adjudicate that claim when addressing the plaintiffs’s motion for a preliminary injunction. We agree with the district court’s approach and affirm its judgment.
IV.
No. 04-2492: CNH America’s Cross Claim Against El Paso A. Additional Background
The remaining issue is CNH America’s cross-claim against El Paso. This claim requires the Court to determine who will pay for the benefits should the plaintiffs succeed on their claim. To start, we turn to yet another opinion from the district court. On September 3, 2004, the district court granted CNH America summary judgment on its cross-claim against El Paso. The district court found that pursuant to the liability and indemnification provisions of the Reorganization and Benefits Agreement, El Paso had indemnified CNH America against all pre-Reorganization obligations CNH America had for retiree benefits. This included liabilities above the alleged cap agreed to in the FAS-106 Letter.
To recap, on October 3, 1993, as part of the Extension Agreement, JI Case and the UAW agreed to adopt the FAS-106 Letter of Agreement. The letter states:
This will confirm our understanding that the average per capita annual cost to the Company of providing medical and related benefits under the Case Group Benefit Plan to retired employees and surviving spouses of deceased employees shall not exceed $2,750 for Medicare eligible individuals and $8,500 for those individuals who are not eligible for Medicare. Notwithstanding the foregoing, no covered person shall be required to pay a portion of any excess amount prior to April 1, 1998. When issuing the preliminary injunction discussed above, the district court found that this Letter had no effect on those retiring before its adoption (because those benefits vested) and therefore limited the scope of the preliminary injunction to those retiring before the date of the Letter.
During the Reorganization in 1994, additional agreements were signed allocating assets and liabilities of the various corporate entities. Section 3.02(c) of the Reorganization Agreement describes certain liabilities assumed by Tenneco for the pre-IPO retires:
Except as set forth in the Benefits Agreement or the Tax Sharing Agreement, Tenneco or a Tenneco Subsidiary, as appropriate, (i) shall assume the Retained Liabilities effective as of the Reorganization Date and (ii) shall thereafter pay, perform and discharge in due course all of the Retained Liabilities. The Reorganization Agreement then defines “Retained Liabilities” as:
(ii) the Case Liabilities for postretirement health and life insurance benefits (to the extent that Case is obligated on the Reorganization Date) of retirees of the Case Business in the United States and current employees of the Case Business in the United States who retire on or before July 1, 1994 and their dependents as more fully described in the [Allocation] Agreement.
CNH America agreed to assume all other Case liabilities “other than the Retained Liabilities.” In addition to the language in the Reorganization Agreement, the Allocation (or Benefits) Agreement has additional language providing guidance. Section 7.2.2 of the Allocation Agreement states:
Subject to Section 7.4, Tenneco shall retain all liability with respect to postretirement health and life insurance benefits to the extent that Case is obligated on the Closing Date [i.e., the date of the agreement] for United State Employees retired prior to the Closing Date and their dependents. Article V of the Reorganization Agreement further provides indemnification provisions requiring CNH America and Tenneco to defend and indemnify one another for failing to perform their obligations under the agreements. Section 5.01 requires Tenneco to
indemnify, defend and hold harmless [Case LLC] . . . from and against any and all Liabilities, and any claims, demands and rights . . . arising out of or due to . . . the failure or alleged failure of Tenneco or any Tenneco Subsidiary to pay, perform or otherwise discharge in due course any of the Retained Liabilities . . . and . . . to perform its obligations under this Agreement or any of the Ancillary Agreements.
Section 5.02 required the same of CNH America with respect to its obligations.
The district court reviewed the agreements pursuant to Delaware law as provided for in the
agreements themselves. Under Delaware law, the terms of a contract “will be controlling when they
establish the parties’ common meaning so that a reasonable person in the position of either party
would have no expectation inconsistent with the contract language.”
Eagle Indus., Inc. v. De Vilbiss
Health Care, Inc.
,
The district court further noted that contract interpretation is a question of law.
Hudson v.
State Farm Mut. Ins. Co.
,
CNH America argued that Tenneco’s liability for pre-IPO retiree health benefits is unambiguously established by Section 3.02(c) of the Reorganization Agreement and Section 7.2.2 of the Allocation Agreement. El Paso argued that Tenneco assumed only below-cap costs of those benefits because Section 3.02(c) and Section 7.2.2 limit liability “to the extent that Case is obligated on the Reorganization Date.” El Paso argued that the parties’s agreements were premised on the belief that benefits were capped as of that date, and therefore, Tenneco assumed only the below-cap costs. El Paso supported its argument with extrinsic evidence. The district court rejected the extrinsic evidence, concluding that:
This extrinsic evidence is not persuasive. It is simply statements made by parties after the Reorganization Agreement was entered into and reaffirms the parties’ belief that retiree health benefit costs were capped. There is no dispute that at the time of the agreement El Paso (or Tenneco) and Case LLC believed that the costs were capped. This extrinsic evidence does not persuade the Court that it was the intent of the parties that Case LLC retained the liability for the above-cap costs.
The district court noted that the problem in this case arises because of the FAS-106 Letter. The court concluded already, however, that the Letter does not cap the benefits of pre-Letter retirees and therefore, CNH America’s liability was not capped with respect to those retirees. It therefore follows, according to the district court, that El Paso assumed these above-cap liabilities.
The district court found additional support for its conclusion in other parts of the parties’s agreements. The Reorganization Agreement’s definition of “Liabilities” includes “foreseen or unforeseen” liabilities as well as “known or unknown” liabilities arising pursuant to, among other things, an “Action,” “before any court.” Therefore, the district court stated:
In summary, the Court concludes that the terms of the Reorganization Agreement and Allocation Agreement unambiguously reflect the parties’[s] intent that Tenneco would assume all of Case’s liability for postretirement health insurance benefits to the extent Case was obligated for those benefits on June 23, 1994, including those which were unforeseen and/or unknown at the time. The Court has preliminarily determined that the FAS-106 Letter did not effectively cap Case’s obligations with respect to hourly retirees who retired or elected to retire prior to the letter’s effective date. It therefore follows that on June 23, 1994, Case was obligated for the full costs of Plaintiffs’[s] health insurance benefits. Pursuant to the unambiguous terms of the Reorganization Agreement and Allocation Agreement, Tenneco and now El Paso assumed those obligations.
Thus, the district court granted summary judgment in favor of CNH America.
B. The Contracts Are Unambiguous and the District Court Properly Granted Summary Judgment to CNH America
On appeal, El Paso argues first that the agreements cannot be “read as conclusively establishing” its liability — that is, El Paso argues that its interpretation of the agreements is a reasonable one that should be tried to a jury. Second, El Paso argues that there is at least a latent ambiguity based on CNH America’s conduct over a five-year period, its failure to ever state that El Paso had obligations extending beyond the capped amounts, and its repeated statements acknowledging that El Paso’s obligations were limited.
Regarding its first argument, El Paso points to the Delaware Supreme Court’s decision in
Eagle Indus.
,
Contract terms themselves will be controlling when they establish the parties’[s] common meaning so that a reasonable person in the position of either party would have no expectations inconsistent with the contract language. When the provisions in controversy are fairly susceptible of different interpretations or may have two or more different meanings, there is ambiguity. at 1232. El Paso argues that the contract language is fairly susceptible to different interpretations
and that summary judgment was therefore inappropriate. El Paso’s argument is essentially that the district court erred by ignoring the language “to the extent that Case is obligated on the Closing Date.” This language, El Paso argues, is evidence of the parties’s intent to limit liabilities according to their “contemporaneous understanding of what they were.” Brief of El Paso at 22. Thus, according to El Paso, any liabilities not contemporaneously allocated were assumed as contingent obligations by CNH America. For this, El Paso points to section 2.1 of the Benefits Agreement.
On the other hand, CNH America points to the contract language as unambiguously
establishing that Tenneco retained all liabilities related to the health care costs whether “foreseen
or unforeseen, . . . accrued or unaccrued, known or unknown,” that were incurred by JI Case prior
to the Reorganization. Moreover, CNH America argues that it is irrelevant that the defendants
believed that Tenneco’s liability was capped by the FAS-106 Letter. The agreement explicitly
allocated the risk of unforeseen liabilities on Tenneco. Regarding the disputed language (“to the
extent Case is obligated on the Closing Date”), CNH America argues that it merely creates a clear
division between Tenneco’s “Retained Liabilities,” i.e., those obligations to pre-Reorganization
retirees on the closing date, and CNH America’s future liabilities, i.e., those obligations to
employees who would retire
after
the Closing Date. According to CNH America, the fact that it
ended up with more liabilities on the Closing Date than Tenneco suspected does not turn the tide in
El Paso’s favor because this risk was specifically assumed by Tenneco by the language “unforeseen
and unknown liabilities.” Finally, CNH America argues that its course of conduct is not relevant
because the contract language is unambiguous and “[i]f a contract is unambiguous, extrinsic
evidence may not be used to interpret the intent of the parties, to vary the terms of the contract or
to create an ambiguity.”
Eagles Indus.
,
We believe that the district court correctly concluded that the contract is unambiguous and
properly granted summary judgment in favor of CNH America. We recognize that the defendants
claim that when they signed the FAS-106 Letter, they intended to cap JI Case’s liability in October
1993. When Case and Tenneco signed the reorganization agreements in June 1994, they both
anticipated that Case’s obligations for retirement benefits were capped by the FAS-106 Letter and
that the retirees themselves would be responsible for above-cap costs. Hence, the parties included
the language that Tenneco would assume Retained Liabilities “to the extent that Case is obligated
on the Reorganization Date . . .” In the absence of other language in the contract, we might have
been persuaded to conclude that the parties were agreeing that Tenneco was assuming liability for
a specific dollar amount — the below-cap costs. We would have been compelled to conclude as
much if the parties had specifically so stated. Nevertheless, the parties were not so specific and we
are required to turn to other language and read the document as an integrated whole. In the parties’s
definition of Liabilities, we find that Liabilities (and hence Retained Liabilities) includes those
liabilities “foreseen or unforeseen . . . known or unknown . . . accrued or unaccrued.” Thus, we read
the contract unambiguously to allocate to Tenneco Case’s Retained Liabilities, including those
unforeseen or unknown. The parties’s beliefs about the
extent
of the liabilities and their actions
pursuant to those beliefs do not demonstrate any ambiguities in the contract language allocating
unknown or unforeseen liabilities to El Paso. That is, the only ambiguity in this case is the amount
of the liabilities because of the parties’s assumption that the FAS-106 Letter capped benefits. The
language of the agreements, adopted by sophisticated entities with able counsel, allocated, as most
contracts do, the risk of increased liabilities upon one of those parties — El Paso. “Contract
language is not ambiguous simply because the parties disagree concerning its intended
construction.”
Eagles Indus.
,
El Paso does rely heavily on CNH America’s course of conduct after the Reorganization — specifically the fact that it never stated that El Paso had liability above the caps, the fact that it paid above cap costs of $25 million in 1998, and its repeated written statements that El Paso’s obligations were limited. The extrinsic evidence, however, cannot be considered when contract language is unambiguous. In any event, we also agree with the district court that the extrinsic evidence merely demonstrates the parties’s belief that their obligations were capped by the FAS-106 Letter and does not indicate that the indemnification contract language itself was ambiguous.
In sum, Section 7.2.2 provides that Tenneco would assume all postretirement health care benefits for those who retired prior to July 1, 1994 to the extent that JI Case was obligated on the Closing Date. The district court has not abused its discretion in issuing a preliminary injunction on the basis that the benefits were lifetime benefits vested for those who retired prior to October 3, 1993 and, thus, the FAS-106 Letter could not limit those benefits. This means, therefore, that despite the parties’s error regarding the extent of liabilities, CNH America is likely to be held liable for the vested lifetime health care benefits for those who retired prior to October 3, 1993 on the Closing Date. Section 7.2.2, however, provides that Tenneco assumed those liabilities. This is reinforced by the parties’s definition of “Liabilities” to include those “absolute or contingent, matured or unmatured, liquidated or unliquidated, foreseen or unforeseen . . .accrued or unaccrued, known or unknown, whether having arisen or arising in the future.” We are convinced that the contract is unambiguous and therefore affirm the district court’s judgment.
Finally, based on this interpretation, the district court did not abuse its discretion in cutting off discovery or in fashioning an equitable remedy under the indemnification provision.
V.
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s judgment in all respects on each of the four appeals.
Notes
[1] Section 301(a) states that: “Suits for violation of contracts between an employer and a labor organization representing employees in an industry affecting commerce as defined in this chapter, or between any such labor organizations, may be brought in any district court of the United States having jurisdiction of the parties, without respect to the amount in controversy or without regard to the citizenship of the parties.” 29 U.S.C. § 185(a).
[2] For ease of discussion, at times the opinion will refer to CNH America by its previous names.
[3] The defendants contend that JI Case and UAW intended the Letter to be a “cost sharing agreement” between JI Case and its retirees whereby JI Case’s obligations for retiree and surviving spouse health care benefits would be limited, effective April 1, 1998. The plaintiffs, on the other hand, contend that the parties intended the Letter to serve only as an accommodation for accounting purposes under FAS-106, whereby UAW agreed to allow JI Case to temporarily reduce the FAS-106 accounting figure that it reported on its financial records.
[4] ERISA provides for two types of employee benefit plans: pension plans and welfare benefit plans. 29 U.S.C. § 1002(1), (2)(A). Pension plans are subject to mandatory participation, vesting, and funding requirements. 29 U.S.C. § 1051. Welfare benefits are not subject to these requirements. Id. Retiree health insurance benefit plans are classified as welfare benefit plans under ERISA. 29 U.S.C. § 1002(1).
[5]
The defendants also advance the argument that this Court already overruled
Yard-Man
in
Sprague v. General
Motors Corp.
,
[6] This is perhaps where the Yard-Man inference makes the most sense. Retirees, who have left their bargaining unit, and can no longer rely on their union to maintain their benefits, are not likely to leave their benefits alterable based on the changing whims and relative bargaining power of their former union and employer. See Golden , 845 F. Supp. at 413.
[7]
The district court in
Golden
likewise rejected the defendant’s argument regarding the durational clauses
because the same language was used regarding pensions and health insurance benefits. The district court stated that
“[g]iven the defendant’s logic, because its pension plan was incorporated into the collective bargaining agreement, its
obligation to provide pensions ended with the expiration of the agreement.”
Golden
,
[8]
The district court in
Golden
characterized
Yard-Man
as “recogniz[ing] that employees are aware when they
accept retiree benefits in exchange for lower wages, that they cannot rely on their union to maintain those benefits once
they have retired and left their bargaining unit. Thus, ‘finding an intent to create interminable rights to retiree insurance
benefits in the absence of explicit language, is not, in any discernible way, inconsistent with federal labor law.’”
Golden
,
[9] Of note, Bittinger was decided by the same district court as the instant case.
[10]
A summary plan description is a publication explaining the benefits of a particular welfare benefit plan and
ERISA requires employers to distribute the descriptions to employees. 29 U.S.C. § 1022. Furthermore, this Court has
held that “statements in a summary plan are binding and if the statements conflict with those in the plan itself, the
summary shall govern.”
Edwards v. State Farm Mut. Auto Ins. Co.
,
[11] The section also provides that “The cost of this coverage is fully paid by the Employer.” Yolton , 318 F. Supp. 2d at 468.
[12] The Court also noted that “[i]ncreasingly, the term also is applied to so-called double-breasted operations to determine whether two or more coexisting employers performing the same work are in fact one business, separated only in form.” at 336.
[13] The Court mentioned that “[t]he successorship doctrine is often confused with the alter ego doctrine. The successorship doctrine is used to determine whether a new employer has an obligation to bargain when there is a bona fide sale of the employing company. A bona fide sale is found when there is any substantial change in ownership or management.” at 336 n. 6 (citation and quotation marks omitted).
[14]
Moreover, even when a reorganization is supported by legitimate reasons, the employer may be prevented
from avoiding its prior labor obligations.
Allcoast Transfer
,
[15] Section 7.4 provides the following limitation on the liabilities Tenneco assumed. Tenneco shall not be liable for any postretirement health and life insurance benefit costs which result from any action of [Case LLC] after the Closing Date which increases such benefits, except to the extent that such benefit increases are required by applicable law. To the extent that Tenneco is not liable for such benefits, [Case LLC] shall be liable. Without limiting the generality fo the foregoing, it is specifically provided that Tenneco shall not be liable for any increase in the cost of providing postretirement health and life insurance benefits that result from any agreement by [Case LLC] to increase or otherwise modify the per capita annual cost limits set forth in the October 3, 1993 agreement between Case and the UAW regarding “FAS-106 out-year Cost Limiters.”
[16] The Union claims, however, that the FAS-106 Letter was signed as a temporary accounting accommodation.
