Bidwill v. Garvey

943 F.2d 498, 14 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 1449, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 20456
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedAugust 30, 1991
DocketNos. 91-2308 to 91-2310
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 943 F.2d 498 (Bidwill v. Garvey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bidwill v. Garvey, 943 F.2d 498, 14 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 1449, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 20456 (4th Cir. 1991).

Opinion

OPINION

WILKINSON, Circuit Judge:

This case arises from a protracted dispute among trustees of a pension plan for professional football players. The trustees chosen by the football players and those chosen by the club owners have been unable to agree on, among other things, the scope of their powers, the interpretation of their authorizing document and the amount of money the clubs owe to the pension fund. The district court held that the football clubs owed some $18 million in delinquent payments to the pension plan and additionally held liable for the same amount the trustees selected by the club owners for breaching their fiduciary duties. We agree that the clubs failed to make their full contributions but we do not believe the conduct of the trustees for the owners constituted a breach of their fiduciary obligations. We thus affirm in part and reverse in part the judgment of the district court.

I.

This controversy revolves around the Bert Bell National Football League Player Retirement Plan, a pension and benefit trust for members of the National Football League Players Association. The Plan is structured pursuant to the Taft-Hartley Act, see 29 U.S.C. § 186(c)(5), and the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), see 29 U.S.C. §§ 1001-1461. The Players Association selects three members of the Plan’s board while the National Football League Management Council, an organization of NFL team owners, selects [502]*502another three trustees. The player trustees included a former executive director of the Players Association and two former players. The owner or management trustees included one team owner, a team president and a team executive vice president. The Commissioner of the National Football League is a seventh, but non-voting, member of the Board.

In 1982, the Players Association and Management Council negotiated a new collective bargaining agreement (CBA). The owners agreed to contribute $12.5 million to the Plan each year for five years, “provided that such contributions are allowable as deductions under the applicable provisions of the Internal Revenue Code.” The first payment was due on March 31, 1983, and the last was due on March 31, 1987. The CBA also directed the Board to set benefits at enumerated levels. Under the prior CBA, the owners’ contributions to the Plan had also been set but the benefit levels were to be determined periodically by the Board to reflect prevailing conditions and actuarial predictions. When the Board first met in 1983, it adopted the preset benefit levels contained in the 1982 CBA, as well as the contribution levels.

Because the Plan’s investments during the early 1980’s produced greater returns than expected, the Plan became overfund-ed. In March 1984, the owners paid only $7.5 million into the Plan instead of the planned $12.5 million. The additional $5 million represented funds that the owners believed were not owed because they were not, in the owners’ view, immediately deductible under the Internal Revenue Code due to the Plan’s overfunded status. See 26 U.S.C. § 404(a). Because the Plan contained a nonreverter clause that made all contributions irrevocable, the owners reduced their payment in the belief that if they paid the disputed funds they would be unable to recover them at a later date.

When the Board met the following month, the player trustees moved for full payment of the $12.5 million, for authorization to institute legal proceedings against the clubs for nonpayment, for submission of a ruling request to the IRS that the full $12.5 million was fully deductible when paid, and for an increase in benefit levels in order to eliminate the Plan’s overfunded status. According to the player trustees, since the Plan referred only to “deductibility” and not to “current deductibility” and since contributions which were not immediately deductible could be carried over to future years, the full $12.5 million was due. The owner trustees agreed to seek an IRS ruling but abstained from voting on the other three motions, which consequently failed. The owner trustees stated they did not support the motions demanding payment because they had doubts that the money was actually due; they further did not support the motion to increase benefits because they believed such an action could be taken only through collective bargaining. The Board filed a request for an IRS ruling in September 1984.

In October 1984, the owners paid the Plan the disputed $5 million plus interest at 6%, the rate specified in the Plan. They did so in order to preserve under the Internal Revenue Code (IRC) their potential right to deductions but they also considered the $5 million an advance partial payment of the contribution due in March 1985. By March 1985, however, the IRS had still not ruled. The clubs initially withheld $6 million of their contributions but later paid that amount to the Plan, again preserving their rights under the IRC, and again designating the payment as an advance towards the next year’s contribution. In March 1986 the clubs made no additional payments to the Plan, but promised that if the IRS ruled that all contributions were currently deductible, they would make all necessary payments plus 6% interest. At an August 1986 Board meeting the differences between the two sides remained irreconcilable. The player trustees again introduced motions demanding payment from the owners and authorizing legal action against them. The owner trustees refrained from voting until they could consult with counsel and the meeting was adjourned.

In early 1987, the IRS indicated that the $12.5 million contributions would not be fully deductible in the years they were paid. On March 5, 1987, the management [503]*503trustees filed a declaratory judgment action in the United States District Court for the District of Maryland seeking judicial interpretation of the Plan phrase “allowable as deductions.” The player trustees counter-claimed, alleging that the management trustees had breached their fiduciary duties under ERISA by failing to act in the best interests of the Plan’s beneficiaries. The player trustees also filed suit on behalf of the Plan against the NFL, the Management Council and the twenty-eight individual football teams for the unpaid contributions and interest.

The district court held that the phrase “allowable as deductions” contained no temporal limitations; therefore, since the IRS had ruled that the clubs could carry over excess contributions and deduct them in future years, the full $12.5 million was due each year. The court entered judgment against the clubs in the amount of $17.8 million plus double interest, attorneys’ fees and costs. See 29 U.S.C. § 1132(g)(2). Later, the court created an escrow account into which the clubs were to pay the disputed contributions. The court did not rule on the fiduciary breach issues pending completion of discovery.

Following discovery, the district court granted summary judgment for the player trustees.

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William v. Bidwill James Kensil Michael Lynn, Individually and as Members of the Retirement Board of the Bert Bell Nfl Player Retirement Plan Appointed by the National Football League Management Council Pursuant to Section 8.1(b) of the Plan, National Football League Management Council the Five Smiths, Inc., D/B/A Atlanta Falcons Buffalo Bills, Inc., D/B/A Buffalo Bills Chicago Bears Football Club, Inc., D/B/A Chicago Bears Cincinnati Bengals, Inc., D/B/A Cincinnati Bengals Cleveland Browns, Inc., D/B/A Cleveland Browns Dallas Cowboys Football Club, Inc., D/B/A Dallas Cowboys Pdb Sports, Ltd., D/B/A Denver Broncos the Detroit Lions, Inc., D/B/A Detroit Lions the Green Bay Packers, Inc., D/B/A Green Bay Packers Houston Oilers, Inc., D/B/A Houston Oilers Indianapolis Colts, Inc., D/B/A Indianapolis Colts Kansas City Chiefs Football Club, Incorporated, D/B/A Kansas City Chiefs the Los Angeles Raiders, Ltd., D/B/A Los Angeles Raiders Los Angeles Rams Football Company, Inc., D/B/A Los Angeles Rams Miami Dolphins, Ltd., D/B/A Miami Dolphins Minnesota Vikings Football Club, Inc., D/B/A Minnesota Vikings New England Patriots Football Club, Inc., D/B/A New England Patriots the New Orleans Saints, D/B/A New Orleans Saints New York Football Giants, Inc., D/B/A New York Giants New York Jets Football Club, Inc., D/B/A New York Jets the Philadelphia Eagles Football Club, Inc., D/B/A Philadelphia Eagles Pittsburgh Steelers Sports, Inc., D/B/A Pittsburgh Steelers Chargers Football Company, D/B/A San Diego Chargers San Francisco Forty-Niners, Ltd., D/B/A San Francisco 49ers Seattle Professional Football, D/B/A Seattle Seahawks St. Louis Football Cardinals Co., D/B/A St. Louis Cardinals Tampa Bay Area Nfl Football, Inc., D/B/A Tampa Bay Buccaneers Pro-Football, Inc., D/B/A Washington Redskins v. Edward R. Garvey Tom Condon Danny M. Jiggets, Individually and as Members of the Retirement Board of the Bert Bell Nfl Player Retirement Plan Appointed by the National Football League Players Association Pursuant to Section 8.1(a) of the Plan, and National Football League, Edward R. Garvey Tom Condon Danny M. Jiggets, Individually and as Members of the Retirement Board of the Bert Bell Nfl Player Retirement Plan Appointed by the National Football League Players Association Pursuant to Section 8.1(a) of the Plan v. National Football League, and National Football League Management Council the Five Smiths, Inc., D/B/A Atlanta Falcons Buffalo Bills, Inc., D/B/A Buffalo Bills Chicago Bears Football Club, Inc., D/B/A Chicago Bears Cincinnati Bengals, Inc., D/B/A Cincinnati Bengals Cleveland Browns, Inc., D/B/A Cleveland Browns Dallas Cowboys Football Club, Inc., D/B/A Dallas Cowboys Pdb Sports, Ltd., D/B/A Denver Broncos the Detroit Lions, Inc., D/B/A Detroit Lions the Green Bay Packers, Inc., D/b/a/ Green Bay Packers Houston Oilers, Inc., D/B/A Houston Oilers Indianapolis Colts, Inc., D/B/A Indianapolis Colts Kansas City Chiefs Football Club, Inc., D/B/A Kansas City Chiefs the Los Angeles Raiders, Ltd., D/B/A Los Angeles Raiders Los Angeles Rams Football Company, Inc., D/B/A Los Angeles Rams Miami Dolphins, Ltd., D/B/A Miami Dolphins Minnesota Vikings Football Club, Inc., D/B/A Minnesota Vikings New England Patriots Football Club, Inc., D/B/A New England Patriots the New Orleans Saints, D/B/A New Orleans Saints New York Football Giants, Inc., D/B/A New York Giants New York Jets Football Club, Inc., D/B/A New York Jets the Philadelphia Eagles Football Club, Inc., D/B/A Philadelphia Eagles Pittsburgh Steelers Sports, Inc., D/B/A Pittsburgh Steelers Chargers Football Company, D/B/A San Diego Chargers San Francisco Forty-Niners, Ltd. Seattle Professional Football, D/B/A Seattle Seahawks St. Louis Football Cardinals Co., D/B/A St. Louis Cardinals Tampa Bay Area Nfl Football, Inc., D/B/A Tampa Bay Buccaneers Pro-Football, Inc., D/B/A Washington Redskins, Edward R. Garvey Tom Condon Danny M. Jiggets, Individually and as Members of the Retirement Board of the Bert Bell Nfl Player Retirement Plan Appointed by the National Football League Players Association Pursuant to Section 8.1(a) of the Plan v. National Football League, and National Football League Management Council the Five Smiths, Inc., D/B/A Atlanta Falcons Buffalo Bills, Inc., D/B/A Buffalo Bills Chicago Bears Football Club, Inc., D/B/A Chicago Bears Cincinnati Bengals, Inc., D/B/A Cincinnati Bengals Cleveland Browns, Inc., D/B/A Cleveland Browns Dallas Cowboys Football Club, Inc., D/B/A Dallas Cowboys Pdb Sports, Ltd., D/B/A Denver Broncos the Detroit Lions, Inc., D/B/A Detroit Lions the Green Bay Packers, Inc., D/b/a/ Green Bay Packers Houston Oilers, Inc., D/B/A Houston Oilers Indianapolis Colts, Inc., D/B/A Indianapolis Colts Kansas City Chiefs Football Club, Inc., D/B/A Kansas City Chiefs the Los Angeles Raiders, Ltd., D/B/A Los Angeles Raiders Los Angeles Rams Football Company, Inc., D/B/A Los Angeles Rams Miami Dolphins, Ltd., D/B/A Miami Dolphins Minnesota Vikings Football Club, Inc., D/B/A Minnesota Vikings New England Patriots Football Club, Inc., D/B/A New England Patriots the New Orleans Saints, D/B/A New Orleans Saints New York Football Giants, Inc., D/B/A New York Giants New York Jets Football Club, Inc., D/B/A New York Jets the Philadelphia Eagles Football Club, Inc., D/B/A Philadelphia Eagles Pittsburgh Steelers Sports, Inc., D/B/A Pittsburgh Steelers Chargers Football Company, D/B/A San Diego Chargers San Francisco Forty-Niners, Ltd., D/B/A San Francisco 49ers Seattle Professional Football, D/B/A Seattle Seahawks St. Louis Football Cardinals Co., D/B/A St. Louis Cardinals Tampa Bay Area Nfl Football, Inc., D/B/A Tampa Bay Buccaneers Pro-Football, Inc., D/B/A Washington Redskins
943 F.2d 498 (Fourth Circuit, 1991)

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Bluebook (online)
943 F.2d 498, 14 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 1449, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 20456, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bidwill-v-garvey-ca4-1991.