Federal Circuits, 3rd Cir. (September 25, 1987)
Docket number: 86-1448
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US Code - Title 29: Labor - 29 USC 1401 - Sec. 1401. Resolution of disputes
U.S. Supreme Court - Bell v. Hood, 327 U.S. 678 (1946)
U.S. Supreme Court - Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v. Bruch, 489 U.S. 101 (1989)
United States Law Articles in English - ERISA Disability Policies In California And Beyond
U.S. Court of Appeals for the 8th Cir. - Andy L. Lakey, Jr.; L'Wana J. Rush; George E. Rush; Robert W. Harshner; James A. Mccance; Floyd N. Harris; Robert J. Walz; B.L. Johnston; Vida S. Reader on Behalf of Themselves and all Persons Similarly Situated, Appellants, v. Remington Arms Company, Inc., Appellee. Remington Arms Company, Inc. v. United States of America and John O. Marsh, Jr., Secretary of the Army. Andy L. Lakey, Jr.; L'Wana J. Rush; George E. Rush; Robert W. Harshner; James A. Mccance; Floyd N. Harris; Robert J. Walz; B.L. Johnston; Vida S. Reader on Behalf of Themselves and all Persons Similarly Situated, v. Remington Arms Company, Inc. Remington Arms Company, Inc., Appellant, v. United States of America and John O. Marsh, Jr., Secretary of the Army, Appellees., 874 F.2d 541 (8th Cir. 1989) Jr.; L'Wana J. Rush; George E. Rush; Robert W. Harshner; James A. Mccance; Floyd N. Harris; Robert J. Walz; B.L. Johnston; Vida S. Reader on Behalf of Themselves and all Persons Similarly Situated, Appellants, v. Remington Arms Company, Inc., Appellee. Remington Arms Company, Inc. v. United States of America and John O. Marsh, Jr., Secretary of the Army. Andy L. Lakey, Jr.; L'Wana J. Rush; George E. Rush; Robert W. Harshner; James A. Mccance; Floyd N. Harris; Robert J. Walz; B.L. Johnston; Vida S. Reader on Behalf of Themselves and all Persons Similarly Situated, v. Remington Arms Company, Inc. Remington Arms Company, Inc., Appellant, v. United States of America and John O. Marsh, Jr., Secretary of the Army, Appellees.
Paula R. Markowitz (argued), Markowitz & Richman, Philadelphia, Pa., for appellants.
Martin Wald (argued), Deena Jo Schneider, Arden J. Olson, Schnader, Harrison, Segal & Lewis, Philadelphia, Pa., for appellees.Before HIGGINBOTHAM and BECKER, Circuit Judges, and DUMBAULD, District Judge.*OPINION OF THE COURTBECKER, Circuit Judge.Three classes of former salaried employees of the Plastics Division of defendant Firestone Tire & Rubber Co ("Firestone") allege that the administrator of Firestone's pension and welfare plans improperly denied them various benefits allegedly due under those plans. The "rub" is that the plan administrator is Firestone itself--which is also the sole source of funding for the plan at issue in Count I. To evaluate plaintiffs' claims we must address important questions about the scope of judicial review of decisions by pension plan administrators on plan participants' claims for benefits.Proceeding individually, the named plaintiffs also contend that the plan administrator did not respond properly to their requests for information. In Count VII of their complaint, these plaintiffs invoke the statutory remedy for that wrong provided in Sec. 502(c) of ERISA, 29 U.S.C. Sec . 1132(c), and ask the court to order defendants to pay each named plaintiff damages of $100 per day.After concluding that the plan administrator's decision to deny benefits should be reviewed under the deferential arbitrary and capricious standard, the district court granted summary judgment for defendants on all of the counts now before us, 640 F.Supp. 519. We affirm that decision with respect to Counts III and V, but reverse with respect to Counts I and VII.With regard to Count I, we hold that the decision by Firestone to deny benefits under the Termination Pay plan should be reviewed de novo by the court and that there should be deference to neither the plan administrator's nor the participants' construction of plan terminology. We accordingly remand so that the district court can decide the proper construction of the relevant plan language.With regard to Count VII, we hold that an individual has standing to request damages pursuant to Sec. 502(c) of ERISA even if he is no longer an employee and is not entitled to any benefits other than those he has already received when he requested information under that provision. Section 502(c) confers wide discretion on the district court, however, to determine how much the claimant should receive in damages. We remand Count VII to permit the district court to exercise that discretion.I. BACKGROUND FACTS AND STATEMENT OF CONTENTIONSThe three plaintiff classes consist of a total of over 500 former salaried employees of the Plastics Division of defendant Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. When Firestone sold its Plastics Division to the Occidental Petroleum Corporation on November 30, 1980, "most if not all" of the class members were offered the opportunity to continue in the positions they had occupied under Firestone. Most accepted. Firestone maintained three welfare or pension plans which are relevant for present purposes.First, under the Termination Pay plan Firestone provided severance pay to salaried employees under certain conditions discussed in detail below. After the sale of the Plastics Division, plaintiffs requested benefits pursuant to that plan but Firestone denied them. Plaintiffs challenge that denial in Count I.Second, under the Retirement Plan, Firestone offered defined retirement benefits if employees retired at age 65; it offered other somewhat smaller benefits if employees took early retirement, which they could do under certain limited circumstances. The Retirement Plan also offered deferred vested benefits, which were smaller than either the regular or the early retirement benefit, to employees who could not meet the conditions for either regular or early retirement but who could meet other less stringent conditions. After the sale of the Plastics Division plaintiffs sought early retirement benefits, but Firestone denied their claims and awarded only the lesser deferred vested benefit. Plaintiffs challenge this decision in Count III.Firestone also maintained a Stock Purchase Plan, under which one class of plaintiffs had been accumulating stock. When Firestone sold the Plastics Division some of these class members' accumulated stock rights had not vested pursuant to the Plan. In Count V, plaintiffs contend that the sale of the Plastics Division was a partial termination under ERISA, 26 U.S.C. Sec . 411(d)(3), automatically vesting their rights under the Plan on the date of the sale.Finally, after the sale several of the named plaintiffs wrote to Firestone to request information about their benefits under each of the above plans. Plaintiffs contend that Firestone failed to respond properly to these requests, as required by section 502 of ERISA.1 That provision also gives participants and beneficiaries a private right of action for damages against the plan administrator if the administrator does not fulfill his Sec. 502(c) obligations. The named plaintiffs who sought information press that right of action in Count VII.The district court granted summary judgment for defendants on all of the above claims. The court also dismissed several other counts, but plaintiffs do not appeal these decisions.2At the heart of the district court's opinion granting summary judgment on Counts I, III and V was the court's deference to decisions by the plan administrator. In each case the administrator based its denial of claims on a construction of plan language. The district court believed that it could not reverse the administrators' constructions of the plans' terms unless they were arbitrary and capricious, and it felt obliged to uphold the administrator's decisions given that standard of review.At the core of the plaintiffs' challenge to the district court's decision is their contention that the district court should not have applied the arbitrary and capricious standard in this case. We now address that contention.3II. SCOPE OF REVIEWA. Plaintiffs' ContentionsPlaintiffs argue that both the common law of trusts and federal common law developed pursuant to ERISA counsel against deferring to decisions by fiduciaries with interests adverse to those of the claimants. Such a conflict can occur, for example, if the employer is the plan administrator and the plan provides that the employer's contributions in a given year are determined by the cost of satisfying plan liabilities in the prior year. Or, as in this case with respect to Count I, a conflict of interest may occur if the plan administrator is also the employer and the plan is unfunded, so that any benefits provided by the plan are paid directly by the employer out of its general corporate funds.Plaintiffs advance two arguments to justify rejection of the arbitrary and capricious standard, and though these theories are based on different legal principles they produce essentially the same result. First, plaintiffs argue that the principles of trust law should control, that under trust law the plan administrator owes the employees a fiduciary duty, and that courts enforce that duty by construing all plan language "solely in the interest of the beneficiary." Plaintiffs argue further that the sole benefit standard requires courts to construe all ambiguities in plan language in favor of the beneficiaries, and in favor of coverage.Alternatively, plaintiffs argue that contract law controls, that the welfare plan at issue in Count I is a unilateral contract drafted by defendant Firestone, and that the principles of contract law require that ambiguities be construed against the draftsman. The result under this theory is also to construe ambiguities regarding coverage in favor of the employee or former employee requesting benefits.B. Current Law on the Scope of ReviewThe clear weight of authority under ERISA is against the plaintiffs' position. As defendants correctly note in their response to plaintiffs' argument, most courts of appeals have applied the arbitrary and capricious standard when considering challenges to plan administrators' denial of benefits. Kosty v. Lewis, 319 F.2d 744 (D.C.Cir.1963); Miles v. New York State Teamsters Conference, 698 F.2d 593 (2d Cir.1983); Holland v. Burlington Industries, 772 F.2d 1140 (4th Cir.1985), affirmed mem. as Brooks v. Burlington Industries, --- U.S. ----, 106 S.Ct. 3267, 91 L.Ed.2d 559, cert. denied as Slack v. Burlington Industries, --- U.S. ----, 106 S.Ct. 3271, 91 L.Ed.2d 562 (1986);4 Dennard v. Richards Group, Inc., 681 F.2d 306, 314 (5th Cir.1982); Varhola v. Doe, 820 F.2d 809 (6th Cir.1987); Blakeman v. Mead Containers, 779 F.2d 1146 (6th Cir.1985); Pabst Brewing Co. v. Anger, 784 F.2d 338 (8th Cir.1986) (per curiam); Dockray v. Phelps Dodge Corp., 801 F.2d 1149 (9th Cir.1986); Anderson v. Ciba-Geigy Corp., 759 F.2d 1518 (11th Cir.1985).5 Most of these courts--though, as we discuss below, not all--have applied this standard without stopping to ascertain whether the plan's funding obligations gave the plan administrator an interest adverse to the claimants with respect to the question whether benefits should be paid.The arbitrary and capricious standard has not been applied unanimously, however, or without misgivings. First, recognizing the possibility that an interested decisionmaker's bias may prejudice him against the claimant and thereby deprive the claimant of an impartial hearing, this Court has explained in detail why it refused to defer to decisions made under ERISA by such fiduciaries.In Struble v. New Jersey Brewery Employees' Welfare Trust Fund, 732 F.2d 325 (3d Cir.1984), we declined to apply the arbitrary and capricious standard when reviewing a decision by plan administrators to return to the employers money which the employers had paid to fund a specified level of employee benefits. The beneficiaries alleged that if the trustees had fulfilled their duty to act "solely in the interest of the beneficiaries," ERISA Sec. 404, 29 U.S.C. Sec . 1104, they would have used the excess to purchase more benefits for the employees rather than returning the surplus to the employers. We held that when beneficiaries sue claiming that plan fiduciaries "have sacrificed the interests of the beneficiaries as a class in favor of some third party's interests," reviewing courts must "apply the strict statutory standards of ERISA" rather than "the more deferential 'arbitrary and capricious' standard." 732 F.2d at 333-34.6Second, even some courts that apply the label "arbitrary and capricious" to describe the scope of their review in fact subject plan administrators' decisions to more rigorous review than that normally accorded under the arbitrary and capricious standard under certain circumstances, especially when the plan administrator possesses an adverse interest. A line of cases in the Ninth Circuit provides one example. In Harm v. Bay Area Pipe Trades Pension Plan Trust Fund, 701 F.2d 1301, 1305 (9th Cir.1983) (citations omitted), the court held that if a plan provision excludes a "disproportionate number" of participants from benefits, "the burden shifts to the trustees to show a reasonable purpose for the exclusion." Similarly, in Jung v. FMC Corp., 755 F.2d 708, 711-12 (9th Cir.1985), the same court construed the arbitrary and capricious standard to provide:Where, as here, the employer's denial of benefits to a class avoids a very considerable outlay [by the employer], the reviewing court should consider that fact in applying the arbitrary and capricious standard of review. Less deference should be given to the trustee's decision.Finally, in Dockray v. Phelps Dodge Corp., 801 F.2d 1149, (9th Cir.1986) the court defined the standard of review with great care, shaping it in response to "the countervailing tugs of divided loyalty pulling" at the plan administrator.At the time that Administrator/Employee Benefits' Director McGowan denied Dockray's pension application [a] strike [against the employer] had entered its third month. The strike had been unusally bitter and violent. The Governor of Arizona had sent National Guardsmen to protect replacement workers as they crossed the lines of massed pickets outside the mine gates. Scuffles, property damage, vigilante violence, and numerous arrests had attracted national media attention to the dispute. For Dockray to "win" his pension would no doubt have boosted the strikers' morale at a time when Phelps Dodge had apparently succeeded in overcoming the picketing and had fully staffed the mine with replacement workers. Given this highly charged atmosphere, we think it unrealistic to grant the same substantial deference to the consideration of Dockray's application by an administrator who is also a senior member of Phelps Dodge management as we would to the decision of a wholly independent fund trustee in similar circumstances.On remand, the burden of persuasion, of course, remains with Dockray. To prevail, Dockray must show that the Administrator breached his statutory fiduciary duty to act "for the sole and exclusive benefit" of the fund's beneficiaries, including Dockray. 29 U.S.C. Sec . 186(c)(5). The court will weigh the Adminstrator's rebuttal of Dockray's evidence of bias against the arbitrary and capricious standard. However, the district court should be appreciably more critical of the reasons advanced by the Administrator, and less willing to resolve all ambiguities in the Administrator's favor, than the court would be if the fund were administered by an independent trustee.801 F.2d at 1152-53 (footnote omitted).Similarly, in Dennard v. Richards Group, Inc. 681 F.2d 306, 314 (5th Cir.1982) the Fifth Circuit held that whether a plan administrator's interpretation of a term is arbitrary and capricious turns, inter alia, on the "legally correct" meaning of the term. The Fifth Circuit also emphasized that the facts of a particular case should influence the district court reviewing a plan administrator's decision. On remand, therefore, the district court was instructed to consider the "factual background of the determination by a plan and inferences of lack of good faith, if any." 681 F.2d at 314.We believe that these cases reflect significant dissatisfaction with the arbitrary and capricious standard when the employer can profit from its decision to deny benefits. We also believe, however, that the propriety of the standard depends on the context in which it is used. In particular, we think it important to distinguish between the standard's use under some ERISA plans and its use in review of decisions made by trustees of plans established pursuant to Sec. 302(c) of the Labor Management Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. Sec . 186(c). We can explain this distinction best by tracing the development of the arbitrary and capricious standard. As the discussion in Part I C shows, the standard reached ERISA after it was adopted from the common law of trusts by courts construing the LMRA. The safeguards present in the LMRA distinguish that context from many administrative decisions made under ERISA and indicate that the standard should apply in only some ERISA contexts.C. The Origin of the Arbitrary and Capricious StandardThe arbitrary and capricious standard governs judicial review of plan administrators' decisions in pension plans set up under Sec. 302(c)(5) of the Labor Management Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. Sec . 186(c)(5), see e.g., Wolf v. National Shopmen Pension Fund, 728 F.2d 182 (3d Cir.1984), and courts appear to have imported the standard into ERISA by analogy to cases concerning LMRA plans. As we explained in Struble, 732 F.2d at 333:The "arbitrary and capricious" standard derives from section 302(c)(5) of the LMRA. That section imposes a duty of loyalty on section 302 trustees by permitting employer contributions to a welfare trust fund only if the contributions are used "for the sole and exclusive benefit of the employees...." Section 1104 of ERISA imposes a similar duty of loyalty, and not surprisingly the courts have applied the "arbitrary and capricious" standard under ERISA as well.See, e.g., Music v. Western Conference of Teamsters Pension Trust Fund, 712 F.2d 413 (9th Cir.1983). The LMRA cases, in turn, borrowed principles from the common law of trusts--a body of law which also formed the basis for ERISA itself. We therefore begin our analysis with a brief review of the relevant trust law doctrines.The paradigmatic common law trustee must act solely for the benefit of the beneficiaries. Restatement (Second) of Trusts Sec. 170. If the settlor of the trust instructs that the trust assets be distributed among the beneficiaries, without prescribing the method for doing so, he perforce relies on the trustee's discretion to determine how the allocation should be made. Courts therefore respect the allocation decision unless it constitutes an abuse of discretion. See id. Sec. 187, which provides:Where discretion is conferred upon the trustee with respect to the exercise of a power, its exercise is not subject to control by the court, except to prevent an abuse by the trustee of his discretion.Comment (g) to Restatement Sec. 187 explains, however, that courts will not defer to a trustee's judgment when a conflict of interest threatens the trustee's impartiality:g. Improper motive. The court will control the trustee in the exercise of a power where he acts from an improper even though not a dishonest motive.... In the determination of the question whether the trustee in the exercise of power is acting from an improper motive the fact that the trustee has an interest conflicting with that of the beneficiary is to be considered.Building on these trust law principles, the Labor Management Relations Act created a framework within which employers could set up pension plans for their unionized employees. Under Sec. 302(c)(5) of the LMRA, however, "employees and employers [must be] equally represented in the administration of [the pension or welfare] fund." The LMRA sets out elaborate requirements intended to protect the plans it authorizes from control by a party biased toward either the employees or employer.7The arbitrary and capricious standard was first used under LMRA plans in a line of cases in the district court for the District of Columbia (and subsequently approved by the D.C. Circuit). These cases have two themes.First, the courts discussed the impartiality of the LMRA decisionmakers, and they relied on that impartiality in settling on the arbitrary and capricious standard. Second, the cases also attempted to determine whether an employee's interest in his pension benefits was contractual or equitable. If the former, these first courts believed, then judicial review of an administrator's decision would be de novo, as would a court's review of a standard breach of contract claim. If the interest was equitable, however--as is a beneficiary's interest in his right to receive benefits pursuant to a trust--then the court would be more deferential.Both of these themes reappear in the current debate about the appropriate scope of review under ERISA. It will therefore be helpful to review these early cases in some detail.The first court to address these questions was Van Horn v. Lewis, 79 F.Supp. 541 (D.D.C.1948), decided approximately a year after the passage of the LMRA. There the employer Trustee of a Sec. 302 plan challenged the Trustees' decision to set benefits at a particular level. The district court noted that the LMRA divided power equally between employer and employee representatives, holding that the plan "specifically gives each Trustee equal power both in the establishment of the Fund and its administration." For this reason and because the plan was "a beneficial Fund, and the rules applicable to charitable trusts undoubtedly apply," the court held that "the majority of the Trustees have a right to act" so long as their decision is not "improper, unbusinesslike, or not in accordance ... with the letter and the spirit of the Labor Management Relations Act." Id. at 544.In Hobbs v. Lewis, 159 F.Supp. 282 (D.D.C.1958), the de novo approach surfaced for the first time. There the court reviewed a plan administrator's denial of benefits. The Pension Plan relied on Van Horn to contend that "the Fund is a charitable trust" and therefore "that the court cannot interfere in its decisions unless the Trustees act arbitrarily or unreasonably." The district court rejected that contention, however, holding:In the first place, I do not agree that this Fund is a charitable trust, involving mere gratuities, but am of the opinion that money paid from [the plan] is in the nature of a fringe benefit, a term of recent origin, or deferred, contingent compensation which the employees of signatories may be entitled to receive in addition to their wages, and which was procured for them by their bargaining agent, the United Mine Workers of America.... An employee therefore has a contractual right to this pension if and when he comes within the regulations prescribed by the Trustees.159 F.Supp. at 286. The Trustees also pointed to a term in the Trust agreement "which grants them full authority in respect of coverage, eligibility, amounts of benefits, etc." Id. The district court construed this clause to grant the Trusteesthe right to set up requirements for eligibility, etc., which they have done ... and to pass upon applications for pension when made and determine whether they come within the requirements. However, I do not believe it comprehends the deprivation of an applicant's right of recourse to the Courts when he disagrees with the determination of the Trustees on this point, regardless of whether they acted arbitrarily or unreasonably.Id.The debate continued in Ruth v. Lewis, 166 F.Supp. 346 (D.D.C.1958). There the trustees pointed to language in the plan document making them responsible for the decision whether to grant or deny benefits, and they contended that this language committed the benefits decision entirely to their discretion, so that there could be no judicial review at all. The district court disagreed, holdingThis Court is of the opinion that despite the contractual provisions in the trust instrument giving absolute discretion to determine eligibility to the fund, judicial review does lie where applicants can show a breach of fiduciary trust, fraud or arbitrary action.166 F.Supp. at 349 (footnotes omitted).8Judge Holtzoff, writing in 1960 in Kennet v. United Mineworkers of America, 183 F.Supp. 315 (D.D.C.1960) still found the question vexing. He began his answer by noting that the LMRA "authorized the establishment of welfare funds by employers for the sole and exclusive benefit of the employees of the employer and their families and dependents," and that "[t]he statute further provided ... that the employees and employers were to be equally represented in the administration of th[e] fund." Id. at 316. He then presented the trust law reasoning relied upon by Ruth v. Lewis:In effect, we are confronted with a trust fund governed by three trustees and a large groups of beneficiaries of the trust fund. One of the principal branches of equity jurisprudence has traditionally been the protection of the rights of beneficiaries of trust funds. A beneficiary of a trust fund is entitled and has always been entitled to have recourse to a court of equity to secure the proper performance of the duties of the trustees and his rights in the fund. Consequently, on this ground alone the Court would have the power to determine the plaintiff's legal rights in the fund and the correctness of the action of the trustees in denying him a pension.183 F.Supp. at 317.Judge Holtzoff then set out the contractual approach to the problem before him, which is much akin to the argument made before us by the plaintiffs here:There is another approach to this problem. Contrary to the argument of defendant's counsel, the payments made from the fund are not gifts or gratuities. The employer, in making payments into the fund, is not making a gift. This fund was established pursuant to a contract between the union and the employers governing the terms of employment. Payments into the fund are part of the compensation received by the employee over and above his weekly wages. The services rendered by him are the consideration for both his wages and his pension.... The employee may be regarded as a third party beneficiary to a contract....The Court concludes, therefore, that recourse to judicial action may be had to enforce rights under this fund and in such an action the Court will review the legal rights of the plaintiff and determine whether any erroneous decision has been reached by the trustees on questions of law. It will also review, to a limited extent, decisions of the trustees on questions of fact; certainly whether there is any substantial evidence sustaining the decision on questions of fact.... Finally, and it is not denied that this may be done, the Court will review the question of whether the action of the trustees is in any way arbitrary or capricious.Id. at 317-18.In reliance on this line of cases the District of Columbia Circuit settled on the arbitrary and capricious standard for review of decisions by plan administrators in Sec. 302(c) plans. See Danti v. Lewis, 312 F.2d 345 (D.C.Cir.1962); Kosty v. Lewis, 319 F.2d 744 (D.C.Cir.1963). This circuit subsequently did likewise. See Gomez v. Lewis, 414 F.2d 1312 (3d Cir.1969).D. Application of the LMRA Rule Under ERISAThe first ERISA cases to invoke the arbitrary and capricious standard did so without any discussion of the differences between the LMRA and ERISA contexts. See, e.g., Bayles v. Central States Pension Fund, 602 F.2d 97, 99-100 and n. 3 (5th Cir.1979); Bueneman v. Central States Pension Fund, 572 F.2d 1208 (8th Cir.1978). So have most subsequent cases. We believe, however, that in applying the common law of trusts under ERISA courts must be cognizant of the features that distinguish the ERISA arrangements from the paradigmatic common law situation. Both ERISA and the LMRA permit the trust form to be used by employers for the benefit of their employees even though--since they deal with each other at arms' length, like buyers and sellers of any other commodity--there will sometimes be conflicts of interest between those two groups. This difference does not prevent the trust form from being used, but it does require that trust principles not be applied mechanically in the new context.In their oversight of a trust where the impartiality of the trustee had been carefully assured, the LMRA courts could easily adopt the principle of trust law applicable with respect to judicial review of an impartial trustee's execution of his duties. At least one court has done so in explicit reliance on Sec. 187 of the Restatement of Trusts. See Brune v. Morse, 475 F.2d 858, 860 n. 2 (8th Cir.1973). Because the LMRA's precautions assure that the plan administrator will be neutral, it is easy to understand why the courts adopted this rule for judicial review of decisions made in the administration of an LMRA plan.In the unfunded pension plan at issue in Count I of the complaint in this case, however, there is no assurance of the trustee's impartiality. The plan is controlled entirely by the employer, not by a group evenly divided between employer and employees. Because the plan is unfunded, every dollar provided in benefits is a dollar spent by defendant Firestone, the employer; and every dollar saved by the administrator on behalf of his employer is a dollar in Firestone's pocket. As we have already seen, the principle articulated in Sec. 187 does not govern judicial review of such a trustee's decisions.Two rationales are most frequently advanced to justify deference even in this context to fiduciaries' decisions. The first is that they have more expertise than judges in the management of pension plans; the implication is that the fiduciary whose decision is deferred to is more likely than the judge to have answered correctly the question about the meaning of the plan's term. See Berry v. Ciba-Geigy Corp., 761 F.2d 1003, 1006 (4th Cir.1985) (preferring the decision of plan administrators, "whose experience is daily and continual, [over that of] judges whose exposure is episodic and occasional;" see also Ponce v. Construction Laborers Pension Trust, 628 F.2d 537, 542 (9th Cir.1980) ("trustees are knowledgeable of the details of a trust fund (both its purpose and its operation), and thus they are in a position to make prudent judgments concerning participant eligibility.)"We reject this rationale for two reasons. First, in the context of claims for benefits, the questions which courts must address do not usually turn on information or experience which expertise as a claims administrator is likely to produce. As in this case, the validity of the claim is likely to turn on a question of law or of contract interpretation. Courts have no reason to defer to private parties to obtain answers to these kinds of questions.9 Secondly, as we have explained, there is a significant danger that the plan administrator will not be impartial. The lack of impartiality offsets any remaining benefit which the administrators' expertise might be thought to produce.10Another rationale for deference is also commonly advanced--that courts should not interfere in the trustees' decision to aid one group of beneficiaries at the expense of another. We agree that deference to that kind of decision is entirely appropriate. Struble, 732 F.2d at 333 (upholding use of arbitrary and capricious standard where issue is "whether the trustees have correctly balanced the interests of present claimants against the interests of future claimants"). The same degree of deference should be accorded to investment decisions made by plan administrators, so long as a conflict of interest is not alleged.11 As we explained in Struble, however, and as the discussion of the common law principles also makes clear, deference is inappropriate to the extent that the party who is alleged to have benefited from the challenged decision is not a beneficiary. Id. at 333-34 (arbitrary and capricious standard should not be applied where issue is whether "they have sacrificed valid interests to advance the interests of nonbeneficiaries" and noting that the employer is not a beneficiary). Here, of course, the employer--who also made the decision--is the party who benefited from the denial of benefits.Even the cases from other circuits adopting the arbitrary and capricious standard have allowed plaintiffs to show that the plan administrator was influenced by some special kind of improper motive, though they begin with the presumption that the plan administrator was impartial. In light of the incentives facing employers we think that both common sense and the principles of trust law require rejection of that presumption.E. The Standard to be Applied HereThe principles of trust law instruct that when a trustee is thought to have acted in his own interest and contrary to the interest of the beneficiaries, his decisions are to be scrutinized with the greatest possible care. "Uncompromising rigidity has been the attitude of courts of equity when petitioned to undermine the rule of undivided loyalty" which governs a trustee in the execution of his fiduciary duty. Meinhard v. Salmon, 249 N.Y. 458, 464, 164 N.E. 545, 546 (1928). Struble applied this standard to review a decision about how to use surplus plan assets.This rule would suggest that any ambiguity in the trust document should be resolved in favor of the beneficiaries, and that is the result for which plaintiffs contend here. Application of this rule would produce exactly the opposite result from the one defendants contend for: under the arbitrary and capricious standard, a trustee's interpretation of the Plan's provisions stands unless it is unreasonable; as noted, under the plaintiffs' theory, the claimant's interpretation wins so long as it meets the same low standard.We reject the plaintiffs' rule for reasons similar to the ones that led us to reject defendants': plaintiffs, like defendants, mischaracterize the incentives motivating the parties. For example, with respect to Count I, the trustee (Firestone) is clearly not disinterested in the amount of severance pay awarded; its impartiality therefore cannot be relied upon to produce a fair result. But whether the trustee can be a reliable decisionmaker is an entirely separate question from whether--assuming an impartial adjudicator--the plan document should be construed in favor of the employer or the employees.The trust at issue here provides severance benefits, which are a form of wages. The benefits were offered as an inducement to the plaintiffs, to persuade them to work for Firestone. See Kennet v. United Mineworkers, 183 F.Supp. at 317. See also Inland Steel Co. v. N.L.R.B.,Try vLex for FREE for 3 days
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