Court Refuses to Dismiss Claims over Misplaced Transfer

A federal court decided neither a plan participant nor ConAgra Foods retirement plan and committee has met its summary judgment burden in a breach of fiduciary duty suit.  

Plaintiff James Simpson filed under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) § 502(a)(2) against defendants ConAgra Foods Retirement Income Savings Plans and ConAgra Foods Employee Benefits Administrative Committee for breach of fiduciary duty. Simpson alleged that the plan and its committee breached their duty of loyalty by failing to correctly execute his request to transfer part of his plan investments between funds and declining his requested remedy.

The lawsuit stems from a transaction in which Simpson sought to transfer part of his plan investments from a shorter-term fixed-income fund to a large-cap growth stock fund, and from the committee’s denial of Simpson’s request to credit his account for losses allegedly caused as a result.

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The defendants argued that the plan could not be sued for breach of fiduciary duty because it was not a proper defendant. However, the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas found the plan is a proper defendant, and therefore denied the defendants’ motion for summary judgment as to all claims asserted against the plan.

The court also found that Simpson does not establish beyond doubt that the committee breached its duty of loyalty by relying on impermissible factors in deciding his claim. The court said this is because Simpson essentially relies on nothing more than the fact that his request for compensation was denied.

 

(Contd')

Finally, the court decided the defendants were not entitled to summary judgment based on § 404(c). The court said § 404(c) safe harbor shields fiduciaries from liability for losses in cases when, for example, a participant decides to invest all his assets in one fund rather than splitting his assets among multiple funds. It is not meant to protect fiduciaries from liability for breaching their duty.

Simpson made a telephone transfer of his plan’s investment funds in 2009. He requested 60% of his account be placed into a large-cap growth fund. However, the EA representative he spoke with transferred 60% of his account to a longer-term fixed-income fund. The representative transferred the funds after she received a responsive statement from Simpson that this was OK, rather than in accordance with Simpson’s initial request.

After Simpson contacted defendants to inquire about the transaction, they sent him a recording of the conversation and informed him that the EA representative executed the transaction that she had read back to him and that he had confirmed. Defendants also informed Simpson of his right to file a claim with the plan. Simpson then sent defendants a letter requesting that his account be credited $12,000 due to the EA representative’s mistake. The committee denied Simpson’s request and, in doing so, referenced the fact that he was making a trade very late in the trading day, speaking quickly, and had confirmed the trade as read back to him by the EA representative. The committee also informed Simpson of his right to appeal the decision, which Simpson exercised through counsel.

Simpson’s appeal was also denied by the committee, citing his confirmation of the EA representative’s misstatement as the basis for the denial. Simpson then filed the suit, alleging defendants breached their fiduciary duty of loyalty under ERISA.

The court's opinion is here.

 

Court Moves Forward Excessive Fee Claims Against John Hancock

 The 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has reversed a lower court's decision about excessive fee claims against John Hancock.

Plaintiffs Danielle Santomenno, Karen Poley and Barbara Poley brought a suit against defendant John Hancock Life Insurance Company under the Employment Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) and the Investment Company Act of 1940 (ICA), alleging that John Hancock charged retirement plans excessive fees on annuity insurance contracts offered to participants.

A district court dismissed the ICA excessive fees claims because it said only those maintaining an ownership interest in the funds in question could sue under the derivative suit provision enacted by Congress. In addition, it said the participants are no longer investors in the funds in question. 

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The district court found that dismissal of the ERISA claims was also warranted because participants failed to make a pre-suit demand upon the plan trustees to take appropriate action and failed to join the trustees as parties. The appellate court, however, remanded on the ERISA counts.

According to the court’s opinion, ERISA Sections 502(a)(2) and 502(a)(3) do not require joinder of trustees, and no other court circuit has found pre-suit demand a requirement for civil actions brought under Sections 502(a)(2) or 502(a)(3).  “[A]lthough common law may have required a prior demand before bringing an action, Congress did not incorporate that doctrine into the ERISA statute,” the court wrote. 

The 3rd Circuit’s opinion is here.

 

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