Home Depot ERISA Lawsuit Clears Dismissal Motions

While a court has ruled the plan’s advisers should be carved out of the litigation, the counts against Home Depot fiduciaries will proceed.

The U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia has ruled on a set of dismissal motions in an Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) lawsuit targeting Home Depot and its retirement plan services providers.

The plaintiffs in the case allege a broad range of claims against a number of defendants—including Home Depot Inc.; the administrative committee of the Home Depot Futurebuilder 401(k) Plan; the plan’s investment committee; Financial Engines Advisors; Alight Financial Advisors; and some 30 or more individuals from these firms.

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The claims included in the 98-page complaint are extensive, echoing the language of the numerous excessive fee and failure to monitor ERISA litigation cases that have been filed in recent years. Plaintiffs here suggest Home Depot has selected multiple poorly performing funds for its 401(k) plan, allowed investment advisers to charge its employees unreasonable fees, and turned a blind eye to what amounts to a kickback scheme between an investment adviser and the plan’s recordkeeper.

The court’s ruling addresses respective motions to dismiss filed by Alight Financial Advisors, Financial Engines Advisors and the Home Depot defendants. In short, the court has granted the Alight and Financial Engines motions to dismiss, in which the defendants argued they are not, given their contracted roles and inability to set their own compensation levels as service providers, liable for the fiduciary breach claims alleged in the suit. The dismissal motion filed by the fiduciary Home Depot defendants, on the other hand, has been denied.

As to why the Home Depot motion was denied, the court finds the plaintiffs have specifically and sufficiently alleged that Home Depot’s process in managing the plan “was faulty and tainted by imprudence because the decisionmaking process allowed for the retention of chronically poor performing investments when there were better investments available to the plan. Although plaintiffs have not identified the specific flaws in Home Depot’s decisionmaking process, the court acknowledges that plaintiffs would likely have no access to Home Depot’s particular decisionmaking process at this stage of the litigation. In circumstances such as this, courts have held that plaintiffs may rely on circumstantial factual allegations to show a flawed process—particularly one that involves the fiduciaries’ management of underperforming investments.”

Taking into consideration all the circumstantial factual allegations surrounding Home Depot’s retention of Financial Engines Advisors and Alight Financial Advisors, the court found that plaintiffs have alleged sufficient facts to support an inference of an imprudent process.

In their respective motions to dismiss, Financial Engines Advisors and Alight Financial Advisors contended that they cannot be held liable for any fiduciary breach with regard to their fees because they did not act as fiduciaries with respect to negotiating or collecting their fees.

“Here, plaintiffs do not allege that [Financial Engines Advisors and Alight Financial Advisors] functioned as fiduciaries in any capacity other than by providing investment advice,” the decision states. “Yet, they fail to allege facts sufficient to show that [the advisers] breached their fiduciary duties to provide investment advice. Instead, plaintiffs allege fiduciary breaches arising out of [the advisers’] negotiation and collection of their fees. Such allegations are insufficient. It is well established that a service provider does not become a fiduciary simply by negotiating its compensation in an arm’s-length bargaining process—particularly where, as here, the service provider is not alleged to have had the ability to determine or control the actual amount of its compensation.”

The court similarly rules in favor of the advisers’ motions to dismiss claims alleging prohibited transactions.

The full text of the order is available here

Fiduciaries of Mutual of Omaha 401(k) Plan Agree to Pay $6.7M to Settle Suit

The suit alleged 401(k) plan fiduciaries selected numerous investment options not to benefit the plan or its participants, but because they paid fees to Mutual of Omaha or its subsidiaries.

Parties in a lawsuit accusing Mutual of Omaha Insurance Co. and its subsidiary United of Omaha of self-dealing in Mutual of Omaha’s 401(k) plan have agreed to settle.

The settlement agreement calls for a cash payment of $6.7 million as compensation to a class of participants.

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In a memorandum in support of the motion for preliminary approval of the settlement agreement, attorneys say the $6.7 million cash payment “represents a substantial recovery.” It adds that the settlement is “particularly beneficial to the class in light of the risks posed by continued litigation, including the possibility of the court ultimately finding no liability or the inability to prove damages.”

The attorneys say that substantiating the plaintiffs’ claims regarding excessive administrative fees would have required detailed and expert examination of United of Omaha’s operations and financial records supporting the cost of those operations. “Proving plaintiffs’ claims regarding the Guaranteed Account would have been even more complex and time-consuming,” the memorandum states.

The original complaint alleged the 401(k) plan’s fiduciaries violated their fiduciary duties by selecting numerous investment options not to benefit the plan or its employees, but because they paid fees to Mutual of Omaha or its subsidiaries. In particular, the suit said fiduciaries selected United of Omaha-branded investment funds when each of these Omaha-branded funds invested all of its assets in another publicly available investment fund managed by an unrelated third party—causing the plan to pay a fee to United of Omaha in addition to the fee charged by the underlying fund’s manager when the plan could simply have offered the underlying fund and avoided paying any additional fee to United of Omaha. In addition, it said, for several of the non-United of Omaha funds offered in the plan, the fiduciaries added on a fee in addition to the fee charged by the fund.

The complaint alleged the plan’s fiduciaries included several United of Omaha-branded Mutual GlidePath target-date funds (TDFs), which charged plan participants more than non-plan investors paid to invest in those funds. The lawsuit also claimed plan fiduciaries elected to include in the plan a capital preservation option called the Guaranteed Account, which was managed by United of Omaha, despite scores of other better capital preservation funds on the market, simply because the Guaranteed Account paid significant fees to United of Omaha.

Last January, Senior U.S. District Judge Joseph F. Bataillon of the U.S. District Court for the District of Nebraska denied Mutual of Omaha’s motion to dismiss the suit. In his opinion, Bataillon said an Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) complaint of this nature does not need to describe in exhaustive detail the ways in which plaintiffs believe defendants breached their fiduciary duties.

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