16 Employee Benefits Cas. 2795, Pens. Plan Guide P 23881b George A. Schloegel and the Hancock Bank Profit Sharing Plan v. Laurie Boswell, Defendant-Third Party v. Hancock Bank, Third Party

994 F.2d 266
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedAugust 5, 1993
Docket92-7592
StatusPublished

This text of 994 F.2d 266 (16 Employee Benefits Cas. 2795, Pens. Plan Guide P 23881b George A. Schloegel and the Hancock Bank Profit Sharing Plan v. Laurie Boswell, Defendant-Third Party v. Hancock Bank, Third Party) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
16 Employee Benefits Cas. 2795, Pens. Plan Guide P 23881b George A. Schloegel and the Hancock Bank Profit Sharing Plan v. Laurie Boswell, Defendant-Third Party v. Hancock Bank, Third Party, 994 F.2d 266 (3d Cir. 1993).

Opinion

994 F.2d 266

16 Employee Benefits Cas. 2795, Pens. Plan Guide P 23881B
George A. SCHLOEGEL and the HANCOCK BANK PROFIT SHARING
PLAN, Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
Laurie BOSWELL, Defendant-Third Party Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
HANCOCK BANK, et al., Third Party Defendants-Appellees.

No. 92-7592.

United States Court of Appeals,
Fifth Circuit.

July 6, 1993.
Rehearing Denied Aug. 5, 1993.

Jerry J. Blouin, New Orleans, LA and James O. Dukes, Bryant, Colingo, Williams & Clark, Gulfport, MS, for appellant.

William V. Westbrook, III, Gulfport, MS, for Schloegel.

Todd A. Rossi, Kean, Miller, Hawthorne, D'Armond, McCowan & Jarman, Baton Rouge, LA, for Hancock Bank, et al.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi.

Before POLITZ, Chief Judge, REAVLEY and BARKSDALE, Circuit Judges.

REAVLEY, Circuit Judge:

The issue here is fiduciary relationship under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA). The district court found Laurie C. Boswell to have been a plan fiduciary; we hold that he was not.

The Hancock Bank Profit Sharing Plan (Profit Sharing Plan) purchased two consecutive ordinary life insurance policies insuring the life of a plan participant, George A. Schloegel. Laurie C. Boswell procured the policies and received commissions on the premiums. The Profit Sharing Plan paid insurance premiums from 1977 to 1987, using funds from Schloegel's profit-sharing account. In 1987, the Profit Sharing Plan discovered that its payments of insurance premiums violated federal tax regulations requiring life insurance protection to be "incidental" to a qualified profit sharing plan. Faced with the possibility of losing its tax-deferred status as a profit sharing plan, the Profit Sharing Plan cancelled the insurance policy and placed the cash surrender value into Schloegel's profit-sharing account.

The Profit Sharing Plan and Schloegel (collectively the Plaintiffs) sued Boswell for breach of fiduciary duties imposed by ERISA. Although the Profit Sharing Plan has not lost its tax-deferred status, the Plaintiffs claim that they suffered a $63,300 loss due to the imprudent investment in life insurance. Following a bench trial, the district court entered judgment for the Plaintiffs. 800 F.Supp. 468. We reverse on the ground that Boswell was not an ERISA fiduciary of the Profit Sharing Plan.

I. BACKGROUND

Hancock Bank of Gulfport, Mississippi (the Bank) maintains an ERISA defined benefit pension plan (the Pension Plan) and the Profit Sharing Plan for its employees. See 29 U.S.C. § 1002(2)(A).1 Although this lawsuit concerns only the investments of the Profit Sharing Plan, a discussion of the Pension Plan is necessary to explain Boswell's relationship with the Bank.

The Bank's own trust department serves as trustee for both the Pension Plan and the Profit Sharing Plan. Charles L. Eastland, a trust officer within the Bank's trust department, has been responsible for performing the trustee functions for both plans since 1975. Martha Peterman, the Bank's personnel director, has served as the plan administrator for both plans since 1979.

Before his retirement in 1990, Boswell was a pension and profit-sharing consultant and an insurance broker. Although Boswell was never an employee of the Bank, he worked closely with the Bank from 1958 until the early 1980s as a consultant and an insurance broker.

A. Boswell's Consultations--Other Than Profit Sharing Plan

In 1958, Boswell assisted the Bank in establishing the Pension Plan. He sold life insurance to the Pension Plan and received commissions on the premiums from 1963 to 1979. Boswell regularly advised the Pension Plan until 1979, when the Pension Plan eliminated life insurance protection.

From 1975 to 1984, Boswell also regularly advised the Bank's Group Health Plan, which provided group term life insurance. During this time, the Bank paid Boswell $200 per month as a retainer fee. The parties dispute whether this retainer fee was exclusively for advising the Group Health Plan. No written agreement exists describing the scope of Boswell's services.

From August 1980 to December 1982, the Bank paid Boswell an additional hourly consulting fee. According to Boswell, this fee covered consulting work on the Bank's insurance matters unrelated to either the Pension Plan or the Group Health Plan. Pursuant to this arrangement, Boswell submitted to the Bank itemized statements of his services. Upon examining Boswell's itemized statements, we have found only a few charges that could possibly be attributed to the Profit Sharing Plan.

B. Boswell's Consultations--Profit Sharing Plan

The record demonstrates that Boswell had a much more limited role with respect to the Profit Sharing Plan than he did with respect to the Pension Plan and the Bank's Group Health Plan. At trial, Peterman, Eastland, and Schloegel testified that Boswell served as a consultant on all three benefit plans. But when questioned more closely, these three witnesses could identify only a few instances when Boswell advised the Profit Sharing Plan. The Plaintiffs' compilation of correspondence between Boswell and the Bank also fails to reveal a close relationship between Boswell and the Profit Sharing Plan. The parties dispute whether the Bank ever paid Boswell to advise the Profit Sharing Plan. The Plaintiffs contend that the $200 monthly retainer covered consultations on all plans, not just the Group Health Plan.

C. Profit Sharing Plan's Purchase of Life Insurance

In 1977, Leo Seal Jr., the Bank's chief executive officer and a close friend of Boswell, permitted Boswell to approach the Bank's senior executives with a proposal for them to use assets from their profit-sharing accounts to purchase life insurance. Boswell presented his proposal during a Bank management committee meeting to approximately six or seven senior executives, including Schloegel, who was then an executive vice president of the Bank. Neither the trustee nor the administrator of the Profit Sharing Plan attended this meeting. Boswell explained to the executives that purchasing life insurance through their individual profit-sharing account was a cheap way to buy life insurance since the premiums would be paid using before-tax dollars.

After the presentation, Schloegel expressed an interest in Boswell's recommendation and asked the Profit Sharing Plan to purchase life insurance for his individual profit-sharing account. Based upon Boswell's recommendation to Schloegel and Schloegel's interest, trustee Eastland made the final decision to purchase the life insurance with funds from Schloegel's individual profit-sharing account. The Profit Sharing Plan purchased a New England Life Insurance Company (New England Life) policy on Schloegel's life, effective August 21, 1977. Boswell, as the procuring agent, received a commission from New England Life each year the Profit Sharing Plan paid the premiums.

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