Bank Wins Dismissal of Company Stock Suit

The “presumption of prudence” standard has prevailed again, ruling in favor of the employer in a case where participants claimed a breach of fiduciary duty occurred. 

Plan participants who filed the suit claimed it was a breach of fiduciary duty for continuing to offer company stock as an investment option during a time of corporate financial woes. In dismissing the case, U.S. District Judge Paul D. Borman of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan decided that the presumption of prudence applied to the Flagstar Bank 401(k) Plan because the plan document says the company stock fund will exist if it is one of the permissible investment options. In addition, Borman found that the plan creates a special type of preference for Flagstar stock, as well as protection for the defendant fiduciaries.   

Borman said the plaintiffs also did not meet their burden to prove Flagstar was on the verge of economic collapse or other “dire circumstances” in order to rebut the presumption and survive the motion, even though the company stock price dropped 95% over the class period. The court noted that Flagstar Bank did not fail; Flagstar’s common stock continues to be traded on the New York Stock Exchange; Flagstar received private capital infusions; and Flagstar participated in the federal TARP Program. Participation in the TARP program, and continued private investment in Flagstar demonstrate that it was, and is, a viable company, according to Borman.   

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The plan allowed participants to invest in a variety of investment options, of which Flagstar stock was one. Participants could choose from among 23 investment options that were selected by Flagstar, the Plan Administrator. 

Plaintiffs contended in their suit that the defendants failed to prudently and loyally manage the plan’s investments by continuing to invest plan assets in Company stock when it was imprudent to do so; failing to provide complete and accurate information to plan participants regarding the company’[s] financial condition and the prudence of investing in company stock; and maintaining the plan’s pre-existing heavy investment in Flagstar equity when company stock was no longer a prudent investment for the plan.

The case is Griffin v. Flagstar Bancorp Inc., E.D. Mich., No. 2:10-cv-10610.

(Cont...)

Prudence Presumption Applies to All EIAPs?  

In Griffin v. Flagstar Bancorp Inc., not only did the court decide that the defendants were entitled to a presumption of prudence, but U.S. District Judge Paul D. Borman went on to find that the presumption applies to all Eligible Individual Account Plans, and not just Employee Stock Ownership Plans. Borman said  EIAPs are exempt from the prudent person standard of care’s requirement that plan fiduciaries diversify the plan’s investments, and EIAPs are exempt from ERISA’s general rule that no more than ten percent of a plan’s assets may be invested in employer securities. “These exemptions reflect a strong policy in favor of investment in employer stock,” Borman wrote.  

In addition, the court found that although the term “presumption” often describes evidentiary standards, in stock drop cases the presumption merely indicates the standard required for plaintiffs to state claims. Therefore, Borman concluded that the presumption applies when deciding a motion to dismiss.  

The presumption of prudence has been a controversial issue since first applied in Moench v. Robertson, with some courts rejecting it (see "Court Allows Ambac Stock Drop Case to Proceed") and others applying it (see "Stock Drop Case against UBS Tossed").  

The Department of Labor has spoken out against the Moench presumption as well, saying it immunizes plan fiduciaries from liability for imprudent investments in employer stock by mischaracterizing prudence claims related to such investments as claims about diversification (see "DoL Disputes Home Depot’s Win in Stock Drop Suit" and "DoL Calls for Stock Drop Ruling Reversal").

Amended Cash Balance Claim Filed Past Deadline

A federal judge in Kentucky ruled that cash balance plan participants waited too long before filing amended legal claims challenging their plan's whipsaw lump-sum distribution method.

U.S. Magistrate Judge James D. Moyer of the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Kentucky ruled that the participants’ amended claims against the Hanover Insurance Group exceeded the  five-year statute of limitations for statutory liability claims.

According to Moyer, an interest crediting floor claim accrued in 1997, when the participants received a summary plan description that “clearly repudiated” the interest crediting floor claim by stating that the interest credits were investment experience dependent on market gains and losses. As such, this deadline period on this claim expired well before original and amended complaints were filed, the court said.

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In December 2009, the participants filed an amended complaint challenging the plan’s method of crediting interest and also alleging violations of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act’s (ERISA) anti-cutback provision, which provides that the accrued benefits of a plan participant may not be decreased by a plan amendment. The participants argued that a 2004 plan amendment that eliminated investment-experience interest crediting was an impermissible cutback of their accrued benefits.

In finding that the new claims were time-barred, the court said the only remaining issue was the original whipsaw claim. The suit originated with a complaint by Jennifer Durand, a former Hanover Insurance Group Inc. employee and a participant in the First Allmerica Financial Life Insurance Co.'s cash balance plan. She challenged the plan's whipsaw calculation of her benefits, which required a projection to determine the benefit amount at normal retirement age and a discount to present value of that projected amount.

The plan used the 30-year Treasury bill rate in performing the whipsaw calculation. The plan then used the same rate to discount the projected balances back to their present values. Under the plan, a participant's interest credits were fixed or variable, depending on the market rate of investments a participant selected.

Durand, who elected to cash out of her plan in 2003, alleged that the calculation method violated ERISA and resulted in a partial forfeiture of her vested benefits. According to Durand, the plan's use of a uniform projection rate was not a fair estimate of her future interest credits. She claimed that the use of the 30-year Treasury projection rate as the discount rate resulted in a “wash,” and that a valid whipsaw calculation had to include an individualized projection rate.

The case is Durand v. Hanover Insurance Group Inc., W.D. Ky., No. 3:07-cv-00130-JDM.

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