The owner of a Manhattan laser surgery center has reached agreement with The Department of Labor (DOL) to pay $5 million to its employee stock ownership plan (ESOP) in order to resolve violations of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA).
The agreement was formalized in a consent judgment issued by the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York.
An investigation by the DOL’s Employee Benefits Security Administration (EBSA) found Roy Geronemus, owner of the Laser and Skin Surgery Center of New York, had hired his accountant Samuel Ginsberg to serve as the ESOP’s trustee. Ginsberg then approved the transaction despite a valuation that omitted Geronemus’s actual compensation and corporate debt, in addition to other errors, according to the EBSA investigation.
EBSA found that as a result, the ESOP paid too much when it subsequently purchased some of Geronemus’s stock in his company for $24 million, in violation of ERISA. The violations led the DOL to file suit against Geronemus and Ginsberg.
“Accurate company valuations are critical when it comes to establishing an employee stock ownership plan,” said EBSA Regional Director Jonathan Kay, in New York.
“This agreement upholds our findings that Geronemus violated his fiduciary duty to the plan and its participants when he caused the Laser and Skin Surgery Center of New York Employee Stock Ownership Plan to overpay for the shares,” said Regional Solicitor Jeffrey S. Rogoff, in New York. “It also serves notice to plan fiduciaries that their sole obligation is to protect the interest of the plan participants.”
Under the terms of the consent order and judgment, Geronemus is required to make a cash payment of $5 million to the ESOP and pay a $500,000 penalty. He will also forgive past-due and future compensation that would otherwise be owed to him. In addition, Geronemus and Ginsberg are enjoined from serving as fiduciaries to any ERISA-covered plan.
Details of the complaint can be found here. The consent order can be found here.
By using this site you agree to our network wide Privacy Policy.
Foot Locker Fails in Cash Balance ‘Wear Away’ Litigation Appeal
Participants successfully challenged Foot Locker’s
determination of benefit accruals after the conversion of a traditional pension
plan into a cash balance arrangement.
The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled against Foot
Locker in an Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) lawsuit involving
communications and benefit accrual formulas in the company’s evolving pension
offerings.
The bench trial took place in the United States District
Court for the Southern District of New York, before Judge Katherine B. Forrest,
and resulted in Foot Locker being ordered to reform its cash balance
plan to calculate accrued benefits in a way participants argued they were
entitled to. Participants’ arguments revolved around that fact that Foot Locker
did not fully describe or disclose a period of “wear-away” that could result
for some participants during the transition from a traditional defined benefit
to a cash balance approach, “a phenomenon which effectively amounted to an undisclosed
freeze in pension benefits.”
Judge Forrest ruled the plan’s summary plan description
(SPD) as well as other communications to participants failed to inform them
that their benefits would be subject to a period of “wear-away” during which
new accruals would not increase the benefit to which a participant was already
entitled.
Background information provided in case documents shows that
under the original defined benefit plan, participants had been entitled to an annual
benefit beginning at age 65 that was calculated on the basis of their compensation
level and years of service. The benefit took the form of an annuity, and, “with
exceptions not relevant to the appeal,” employees were not given the option to receive
its aggregate value as a lump sum. In contrast, under the newly introduced cash
balance plan, participants held a hypothetical account balance that, upon
retirement, could be paid out as a lump sum or used to purchase an annuity.
As such, Foot Locker established a beginning balance based
on any given participant’s earned DB plan benefit and a 9% discount rate, as
well as a mortality discount. Following the conversion, participants’ account
balances were credited with pay credits and an interest credit at a fixed
annual rate of 6%.
According to Foot Locker’s stance, the problem of potential cutbacks was
rectified by a stopgap measure that defined a participant’s actual benefits as
the greater of the participant’s benefits under the defined benefit plan as of
December 31, 1995; and the participant’s benefits under the new cash balance
plan. The “greater of” provision, Foot Locker argued, “had the benefit of
ensuring that participants would not lose money due to Foot Locker’s switch to
a cash balance plan, consistent with ERISA’s ban on plan amendments that reduce
a participant’s accrued benefit, which is known as the anti-cutback rule.”
NEXT: Appellate court
proves skeptical
But, the judge determined this also meant that participants’
actual benefits would remain effectively frozen for some period of time
following conversion. That is, until participants earned enough pay and
interest credits to close the gap between the value of their cash balance
account and their old benefits, their actual benefits would remain frozen at
the value of their old benefits as of the first day of 1996, due to the operation of the “greater of”
provision. During that period, any pay and interest credits earned by a
participant would not increase his or her actual benefits, but merely reduce
the gap between the value of the participant’s cash balance account and the
participant’s old benefits. That phenomenon, the fact that a participant’s
actual pension benefits did not increase despite continued employment, is known
in the benefits industry as “wear-away.”
The district court judge determined that Foot Locker viewed announcing
a benefits freeze as a “morale killer,” and that “conversion to a cash balance
plan had the advantage of being able to obscure what was an effective freeze,
without the accompanying negative publicity, loss of morale, and decreased
ability to hire and retain workers.” Foot Locker introduced the new cash
balance plan to its employees in a series of written communications, all of
which the district court found to have “failed to describe wear-away,” to have
“failed to clearly discuss the reasons for the difference” between the value of
a participant’s old and new benefits, and to have been “intentionally false and
misleading.”
On appeal, Foot Locker did not challenge the district
court’s determination that it violated ERISA. Instead, the company quarrels with the
district court’s award of equitable relief under ERISA 502(a)(3), arguing that
the district court erred by: “(1) awarding relief to plan participants whose
claims were barred by the applicable statute of limitations; (2) ordering
class-wide relief on participants’ § 404(a) claims without requiring
individualized proof of detrimental reliance; (3) concluding that mistake, a
prerequisite to the equitable remedy of reformation, had been shown by clear
and convincing evidence as to all class members; and (4) using a formula for
calculating relief that resulted in a windfall to certain plan participants.”
In short, the 2nd Circuit has rejected all of these lines of
argument and affirmed the judgement of the district court to award equitable
relief.
NEXT: Decision
clearly based in Amara precedent
On the time-barring issue, Foot Locker argued that
participants “were put on constructive notice of wear-away (and thus on notice
of their claims under ERISA 102 for the summary plan description’s failure to
disclose wear-away) when they received lump sum payments upon retirement that
exceeded their account balances under the new pension plan.” The company argued,
accordingly, the that the clock on participants’ “102 claims” began running
upon retirement, rendering untimely the claims of participants who left Foot
Locker more than three years before this suit was brought.
Citing a legal principle called the “Novella framework,” the
appellate court ruled against this argument, as follows: “As a threshold
matter, participants would have had not only to notice the disparity between
the lump sum payment and account balance, but also to recognize that the
disparity had some significance worth further investigation. For participants who
had been assured by Foot Locker that they were receiving a more competitive
retirement benefits package in which their account balance would grow each
year, the fact that they were receiving the larger of two numbers on a page
would not necessarily make apparent to them that their benefits had in fact
been frozen for months or years … Even assuming that participants picked up on
the disparity, in order to discover wear-away, participants would still have
had to make a sophisticated chain of deductions about the meaning of the
information on their statements and the mechanics underlying their benefits,
with the opaque guidance contained in the SPD as their guide.”
Moving on to the matter of “requiring individualized proof
of detrimental reliance,” the appellate court is equally unmoved, noting that Foot
Locker’s arguments are “foreclosed by the Supreme Court’s reasoning in CIGNA
Corp. v. Amara.” The argument runs as follows: “On writ of certiorari,
the Supreme Court vacated the district court’s judgment [in the CIGNA/Amara case], concluding that the
remedy of plan reformation was not available under § 502(a)(1)(B) because the
relevant statutory text speaks of enforcing the terms of the plan, not of changing
them. The Supreme Court stated, however, that the district court could have
instead granted such relief under § 502(a)(3) of ERISA, which allows a
participant to obtain other appropriate equitable relief to redress ERISA
violations. In so stating, the Supreme Court rejected the argument that a showing
of detrimental reliance was always required for relief under § 502(a)(3).”
The third and fourth matters of appeal are also flatly
rejected based on the facts of the case, leaving in place the district court’s
ruling and award of equitable relief.