Excessive Fee Suit Against Fidelity Survives Initial Challenge

A federal judge in Missouri has determined that the fiduciary breach lawsuit over excessive fees and revenue sharing practices in ABB’s 401(k) plan, filed by the St. Louis-based law firm of Schlichter Bogard&Denton on behalf of the plan’s participants, can move forward.

In addition to the claims against the company, U.S. District Judge Nannette K. Laughrey of the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Missouri also ruled that the claims that the plan’s investment adviser and directed trustee breached their Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) fiduciary duties could likewise move forward.

Laughrey contended that even though ERISA does not require disclosure of revenue-sharing arrangements, ABB could still be found to have breached its fiduciary duties.

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The court rejected ABB’s argument that because it had made its required ERISA disclosures, it was fully immunized under 404(c) from any claimed fiduciary breaches. Laughrey claimed 404(c) could be raised at trial as a legal defense but was not appropriate when the court was considering a pre-trial request to throw out the case.

The court also found that the plan’s directed trustee might be liable as an ERISA fiduciary because there was evidence it directly managed the mutual funds that made up approximately half of the investment options available to plan participants. The plan’s investment adviser likewise might qualify as an ERISA fiduciary because it “indirectly” exercised discretion over plan assets by paying its affiliate, the directed trustee, to steer the plan toward mutual funds offered by the adviser, Laughrey ruled.

The court went on to reject the argument of Fidelity Trust and Fidelity Management that the participants’ lawsuit should be dismissed because they had not put forward a strong enough case to prove the fees were excessive.

“Plaintiffs have set forth specific facts that the Fidelity Defendants charged ABB per-participant fees significantly in excess of rates paid by similar plans; that the Fidelity Defendants offered investment options whose sub-asset classes ‘may create participant confusion in selecting options;’ the weighted average expense ratio was high compared to peer plans; and, that the Fidelity Defendants subsidized services provided to ABB through revenue sharing,” the court said.

Having made those findings, Laughrey turned away requests by ABB, Fidelity Trust, and Fidelity Management to throw out the suit.

According to the opinion, ABB selected Fidelity Management Trust in 1995 as the plan’s directed trustee. The trust agreement between ABB and Fidelity Trust required until 2004 that ABB get the consent of Fidelity Trust before choosing investment options for the plan and that Fidelity Trust could withhold its approval about any investment option it or its affiliates did not manage or operate.

The opinion said Fidelity Trust was paid directly based on the number of participants or transactions and also received revenue-sharing payments from investment option providers.

Participant Ronald C. Tussey, filed the suit in 2006 against ABB alleging it breached its ERISA fiduciary duties by paying excessive fees to Fidelity Trust and by failing to disclose to plan participants the revenue-sharing arrangement (See Fidelity Tagged in Another 401(k) Fee Suit).

In December, the district court certified the lawsuit as a class action (See Excessive Fee Suit Gets Class Action Approval).

Laughrey’s latest ruling can be found here.

Breach Suit against Broker Too Late

A judge has dismissed a profit-sharing plan participant’s fiduciary breach suit against the plan’s broker because it was filed after the three-year statute of limitations required under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA).

U.S. District Judge Terry R. Means of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas made the ruling in a suit filed against a Dallas-based sales company now called Schnair Sales and Service, its former president and plan trustee, and an RBC Dain Rauscher broker. Means asserted that because the suit by Terrence M. Hanlon, who purchased the company in 2001, was not filed until 2003 and because the RBC Dain Rauscher broker was no longer a “de factor” fiduciary after June 1999, the dispute was raised too late to meet the ERISA deadline.

According to Means’ ruling, broker J. Everett Airington was a “de factor” fiduciary until June 1999 because he was the primary maker of the plan’s investment decisions and strategy. The court noted that former president and owner Alfred J. Melillo let Airington decide how to invest the plan’s assets and relied solely on Airington to provide an investment strategy for the plan.

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Airington recommended that Melillo sign agreements authorizing the use of margin and option writing in the plan account, despite the fact that Dain Rauscher’s policies advised against the use of margin trading in ERISA accounts. According to the ruling, Airington switched the plan’s investments from mutual funds to riskier, more aggressive investments and began churning the account by engaging in frequent trading and a high number of trades that generated fairly significant commissions for Dain Rauscher.

Because of his margin trading, the court said, Airington ended up having to sell stock at inopportune times to cover margin calls.

The case is Hanlon v. Melillo, N.D. Tex., No. 4:03-CV-237-Y, 2/8/08.

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