Bourgeois v. Pension Plan for the Employees of Santa Fe International Corporations

215 F.3d 475, 2000 WL 767378
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJune 14, 2000
Docket99-20412
StatusPublished
Cited by72 cases

This text of 215 F.3d 475 (Bourgeois v. Pension Plan for the Employees of Santa Fe International Corporations) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bourgeois v. Pension Plan for the Employees of Santa Fe International Corporations, 215 F.3d 475, 2000 WL 767378 (5th Cir. 2000).

Opinion

PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:

Plaintiff appeals the dismissal of his employment benefits claim for failure to exhaust administrative remedies. We agree that the plaintiff failed to exhaust administrative remedies, but find that the defendants’ actions require the recognition of a limited estoppel remedy. Consequently, we VACATE the dismissal and REMAND to the district court with instructions to refer the plaintiffs claim to the pension plans for an initial benefits determination on the merits, without consideration of limitations defenses.

I

J. Michael Bourgeois began working for Santa Fe Engineering and Construction Company (Santa Fe) in 1974. For the relevant time periods, Santa Fe was a wholly owned subsidiary of Santa Fe International Corporation Holdings (Cayman), Inc. (SFIC), which in turn was a wholly owned subsidiary of Kuwait Petroleum Corporation (KPC).

Until approximately 1989, Bourgeois worked for the Santa Fe Minerals (SFM) division of Santa Fe. After leaving SFM in 1989, Bourgeois began working for Santa Fe Exploration (SFX), a subsidiary of KPC but not a subsidiary of SFIC. Bourgeois then perceived a problem with his retirement plan benefits and requested a copy of the Pension Plan that was effective at SFIC from 1985-1996. He began a series of conversations and correspondences with personnel from ■ SFX, SFIC, and KPC. These people included Bourgeois’s local SFX personnel representative, the senior Human Resources official of SFIC, the chairman of the board of SFX, and the chairman of the board of KPC.

The SFX personnel representative placed Bourgeois in contact with KPC company officials and obtained a hypothet *478 ical calculation of employee benefits through the SFIC corporate benefits group in Dallas. The chairman of the board of KPC, Nader Sultan, exchanged numerous letters with Bourgeois regarding the dispute. From our review of the record, KPC engaged Bourgeois in discussions regarding his pension plan benefits until KPC successfully sold SFX, the subsidiary in which Bourgeois worked. 1

After the sale of SFX, however, Sultan told Bourgeois that he should present his claim for enhanced benefits to the new owners of SFX, since KPC no longer owned SFX. In a letter dated March 11, 1997, Sultan essentially halted the prior dialogue, concluding that “we have stated all there is to be said and we having nothing more to add.”

Bourgeois filed suit under ERISA 2 against SFIC and two of its ERISA benefits plans, seeking enhanced benefits. Bourgeois alleged that he was entitled to have his pension benefit calculated using his years of service with both SFIC and SFX and using his gross salary rather than his net salary. SFIC, the Pension Plan, and the Profit Sharing Plan raised the affirmative defense of failure to exhaust administrative remedies and filed a motion for summary judgment on that basis. The defendants asserted that Bourgeois failed to follow the formal written claims procedure in the Pension Plan and therefore filed suit prematurely.

Bourgeois states that he received a brochure entitled “Employee Benefits at Santa Fe International Corporation,” describing those benefits, including benefits under the two ERISA plans: the Pension Plan and the Profit Sharing Plan. The brochure stated that the “actual plan documents governfed] the use and administration of the[ ] plans” and advised recipients to discuss their questions with their local personnel representative until the summary plan descriptions (SPD) were issued. Bourgeois claims he never received an SPD, and the defendants present no evidence that shows otherwise. 3

Both the 1985 and 1996 versions of the Pension Plan required that a participant submit a disputed claim in writing to the “Committee,” which is the plan administrator. If the Committee denies a claim, the participant may appeal the denial by submitting a written request for review to the Committee. The Pension Plan documents do not identify the members of the Committee, nor do they give an address or contact information for the Committee. Bourgeois admitted at his deposition, however, that he was aware of the stated procedure, just not who the Committee was.

Bourgeois testified that he believed his correspondence with Sultan was sufficient under the Pension Plan’s claim procedures *479 because Sultan led him to believe that he had some authority to act as an agent of the Pension Plan and because Sultan was the chairman of the board of KPC. Bourgeois admitted, however, that he did not address any written correspondence to the Committee.

The district court granted the motion for summary judgment and dismissed the lawsuit without prejudice, holding that Bourgeois did not show that exhausting his administrative remedies as outlined in the Pension Plan would have been futile, and that he did not show he should be excused from compliance with the written claims procedure. After a denial of his motion for reconsideration, Bourgeois appealed.

II

This court requires that claimants seeking benefits from an ERISA plan must first exhaust available administrative remedies under the plan before bringing suit to recover benefits. 4 Bourgeois claims that resort to the administrative remedies as outlined in the Pension Plan would have been futile because the chairman of the board of SFIC’s parent corporation told Bourgeois that he would receive no further consideration of his claim.

This court has recognized an exception to the affirmative defense of failure to exhaust administrative remedies when such attempts would be futile. 5 The defendants argue that futility may only be shown when the plan administrator is hostile or biased against the claimant, citing Denton v. First Nat. Bank of Waco. 6

In Denton, the claimant argued that it was futile for him to appeal his claim to the benefits review committee, since it was the same committee which initially denied his claim. 7 In such circumstances, this court found that a failure to show hostility or bias on the part of the review committee was fatal to a claim of futility. 8

The only way in which the current case is distinguishable is that the initial denial of Bourgeois’s claim was not by the benefits committee but by other company officials. This court has not decided whether a denial of benefits by a high-ranking officer of the plan sponsor (or an officer of the corporate parent) might be sufficient to establish futility absence a showing of bias or hostility within the benefits committee.

In Communications Workers of America v. AT&T, 9 the D.C. Circuit held that such a showing alone is not sufficient. In that case, the court maintained a strict approach to the futility exception, requiring the claimant to show a “certainty

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Bluebook (online)
215 F.3d 475, 2000 WL 767378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bourgeois-v-pension-plan-for-the-employees-of-santa-fe-international-ca5-2000.