Andrea Depaoli v. W. A. Boyle

447 F.2d 334, 144 U.S. App. D.C. 364, 77 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2984, 1971 U.S. App. LEXIS 9308
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedJune 25, 1971
Docket24558
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 447 F.2d 334 (Andrea Depaoli v. W. A. Boyle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andrea Depaoli v. W. A. Boyle, 447 F.2d 334, 144 U.S. App. D.C. 364, 77 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2984, 1971 U.S. App. LEXIS 9308 (D.C. Cir. 1971).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

This is another in a series of cases involving disappointed pension' claimants of the Welfare and Retirement Fund, United Mine Workers of America. The pension applicant and appellant here alleges he has spent 41 years in the coal industry, and in his application for pension filed with the trustees he set forth details regarding his last 29 years of such employment. The trustees denied his application on the ground that “applicant has not established proof of employment as an employee for one full year for an operator signatory to a National Bituminous Coal Wage Agreement immediately prior to retirement.” 1 In *335 their denial of the pension, the trustees added, “[ejvidence in file also shows applicant has not established proof of twenty years’ classified employment in the coal industry.” 2 Essentially, this denial was based on the standards established by Trustees’ Resolution No. 63 of 4 January 1965. 3 On undisputed facts the District Court granted the trustees’ motion for summary judgment. On the basis of our decisions in Roark v. Boyle 4 and Collins v. United Mine Workers of America Welfare and Retirement Fund, 5 decided together, we reverse and remand to the District Court.

According to affidavits submitted to the trustees and the allegations in his complaint, appellant began work in the coal mines in 1923, and thus would have accumulated 20 years’ service by 1943. From January 1946 to September 1954 he undeniably worked for employers signatory to the National Bituminous Coal Wage Agreement of 1950. Because of depressed conditions in the coal industry he became unemployed, and in January 1955 he and his brother signed a so-called “agreement and lease” with the New Shawmut Mining Company, one of his former employers (a signatory to the Agreement), by which he and his brother undertook work as machine cutters and loaders, the same functions they had performed before. 6 However, the Agreement and Lease was signed in the name “DePaoli Bros. Coal Company,” allegedly at the suggestion of a bank. There was never any partnership agreement. Appellant and his brother signed in the same name the National Bituminous Coal Wage Agreement and became contributors to the Welfare and Retire *336 ment Fund of the United Mine Workers of America in the names of Andrea DePaoli and Joseph DePaoli. From 15 February 1955 to 20 March 1961 the two individuals paid a total of $4,789.88 into the Welfare and Retirement Fund. They discontinued contributions when they were informed by representatives of the Fund that their contributions would not earn them any credit for their pensions, since under the terms of their “agreement and lease” with the New Shawmut Mining Company they were individual contractors and not employees of Shawmut. The so-called DePaoli Bros. Coal Company had no employees, unless the two brothers themselves be considered as employees.

Thus the trustees of the Welfare and Retirement Fund, appellees herein, take the position that the appellant Andrea DePaoli is not entitled to a pension because under Resolution No. 63 of 4 January 1965 he did not spend his last full year as an employee in a classified job for an employer signatory to the National Bituminous Coal Wage Agreement, but rather was self-employed. Surprisingly, neither at the time the appellees’ representative notified the two brothers that, because they were self-employed, they could not obtain a pension by continuing to make their contributions to the Fund, nor subsequently did the appellees’ representatives offer to return the $4,789.88 which the two brothers had contributed following their signature of the Agreement on the assumption that they would be eligible for a pension by making contributions. And in an amended answer to the complaint as well as in oral argument on this appeal counsel for appellees contended that the six and three-year statutes of limitations in Pennsylvania 7 and the District of Columbia, 8 respectively, would bar any recovery of the funds paid by the brothers on the ground of mistake or unjust enrichment, the latter of which was pleaded in the District Court, but apparently also disposed of adversely to the appellant on the motion for summary judgment.

While we might look through the so-called “agreement and lease” between the DePaoli brothers and New Shawmut Mining Company, and find that in truth and in fact the two brothers, since they continued doing precisely the same work they had been doing on the mining property of Shawmut, were actually employees of Shawmut (a signatory to the coal wage Agreement), and find that the supposed contract relationship was a sham to disguise the true position of the DePaoli brothers as employees of Shaw-mut for the purpose of evading certain fringe benefit requirements, yet we prefer to place the reversal and remand to the District Court squarely on our decision in Roark v. Boyle, supra. DePaoli stands in the same position in regard to the signatory last employment requirement invalidated in Roark as did Roark and the other parties to that case and, perhaps more significantly, in the same position as the pension claimant in Collins v. United Mine Workers of America Welfare and Retirement Fund, supra, decided together with Roark. DePaoli had already filed his pension claim and his case in the District Court when Roark was decided.

In Roark, although invalidating the signatory last employment requirement, we considered that newly established, valid eligibility requirements might possibly include also a requirement of signatory last employment, which might be made wholly prospective, but in the discretion of the trustees might be retroactive for the purpose of validating past retirements. Likewise, we suggested, “Similarly we think such provisions may be made applicable to applications heretofore rejected and subsequently presented for reconsideration,” 9 a category in which DePaoli falls. Thus, this court’s Roark opinion was an invitation to the trustees to adopt new eligibility *337 regulations, which might contain the signatory last employment requirement in a validating context, and if such were fair and equitable, might make such new eligibility regulations applicable to persons like DePaoli whose pensions had been previously denied.

But in fact the trustees have not so acted to establish a “validating context” for the signatory last employment requirement as applied to past pension denials. On 14 January 1971 the trustees did adopt Resolution No. 83, revising the basic eligibility requirements for a pension, to be effective 1 April 1971. However, Resolution No. 83 provides that pension applications received prior to the effective date will continue to be governed by Resolution No. 63, which of course contains the signatory last employment requirement found invalid and inequitable in Roark.

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Bluebook (online)
447 F.2d 334, 144 U.S. App. D.C. 364, 77 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2984, 1971 U.S. App. LEXIS 9308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrea-depaoli-v-w-a-boyle-cadc-1971.