Call, Linda v. Ameritech Mgmt

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 9, 2007
Docket05-4592
StatusPublished

This text of Call, Linda v. Ameritech Mgmt (Call, Linda v. Ameritech Mgmt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Call, Linda v. Ameritech Mgmt, (7th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________

No. 05-4592 LINDA CALL, on behalf of herself and all others similarly situated, Plaintiff-Appellee, v.

AMERITECH MANAGEMENT PENSION PLAN, Defendant-Appellant. ____________ Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Illinois. No. 01-717-GPM—G. Patrick Murphy, Chief Judge. ____________ ARGUED NOVEMBER 30, 2006—DECIDED JANUARY 9, 2007 ____________

Before POSNER, KANNE, and EVANS, Circuit Judges. POSNER, Circuit Judge. We’ll have to sketch some back- ground to make this ERISA controversy, which resulted in an award of damages to the plaintiff class of more than $31 million, minimally intelligible. When a participant in a defined-benefit pension plan is given a choice between taking pension benefits as an annuity or in a lump sum, the lump sum must be so calculated as to be the actuarial equivalent of the annuity. ERISA § 204(c), 29 U.S.C. § 1054(c); Stephens v. Retirement 2 No. 05-4592

Income Plan for Pilots of U.S. Air, Inc., 464 F.3d 606, 614 (6th Cir. 2006); Esden v. Bank of Boston, 229 F.3d 154 (2d Cir. 2000). To achieve this equivalence requires determining the pensioner’s life expectancy from a mortality table and then applying a discount rate to the annuity payments that the participant would receive each year until his expected year of death (per the mortality table) if he chose to take his retirement benefits as an annuity rather than as a lump sum. The discount rate converts the stream of expected future payments into a present value, which is the amount of the lump sum. The longer a person’s life expectancy, the greater the value of an annuity to him (because it will be received, on average, for more years) and hence the larger the actuarially equivalent lump sum will be as well, since it is merely the discounted present value of the annuity. But the higher the discount rate, the lower the value of the annuity and hence the smaller the lump sum. A higher discount rate, as the term “discount” implies, reduces the value of future receipts (they are “discounted” more) and hence the present value of those receipts, which is the lump sum. Thus the discount rate and the mortality table jointly determine the lump-sum equivalent of the annuity to which the pension plan en- titles the plan participant. Until 1993, the Ameritech Management Pension Plan, in calculating these lump sums, used (1) a required dis- count rate fixed by the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corpora- tion that we shall call the “PBGC” rate, and (2) an optional mortality table called Unisex Pensions-1984 (UP84). See “Notice of Intent to Propose Rulemaking: Lump Sum Payment Assumptions,” 63 Fed. Reg. 57228-29 (Oct. 26, 1998). In that year the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corpora- tion adopted a new mortality table, the 1983 Group Annu- No. 05-4592 3

ity Mortality Table (83GAM), which specified longer life expectancies than UP84 but only for annuities, not for lump sums. To prevent the change in mortality tables from increasing the cost of pension plans, the Corporation coupled the new mortality table with a new, higher dis- count rate—the 30-year Treasury Bill interest rate, called “GATT” (because adopted pursuant to the General Agree- ment on Tarrifs and Trade). The relevance of discount rates to annuities is that the higher the discount rate, the lower the cost to the pension plan of funding an annuity. The Corporation did not want to apply the new dis- count rate to lump sums because, at the time, ERISA required pension plans to use whatever discount rate the Corporation selected. 29 U.S.C. § 1055(g) (1988). So, since the mortality table was not prescribed, the new GATT rate would be coupled in many plans with the old UP84 table, a coupling that would generate windfalls to plans at the expense of participants because, as we know, the higher the discount rate, the smaller the lump sum. So the Corpo- ration decided that pending legislative action that would either free plans from the Corporation’s mandatory new discount rate or require them to adopt the new mortality table as well, it would publish two different combina- tions of discount rate and mortality table: GATT-83GAM for annuities and PBGC-UP84 for lump sums (though plans could use a different mortality table if they wanted to). “Notice of Intent to Propose Rulemaking: Lump Sum Payment Assumptions,” supra; “Valuation of Plan Benefits in Single-Employer Plans; Valuation of Plan Benefits and Plan Assets Following Mass Withdrawal,” 58 Fed. Reg. 5128-32 (Jan. 19, 1993). The following year (1994), the Ameritech Management Pension Plan amended its plan in an effort to make clear 4 No. 05-4592

that lump sums would still be calculated using the old mortality table, UP84, and, as required, the old, PBGC discount rate, since the new, higher rate was applicable only to annuities. The reason the Plan needed to make explicit that PGBC-UP84 would be the method of cal- culating lump sums for plan participants was that the existing plan required that lump sums be calculated using the discount rate and life expectancies used by the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation to value annuities. So when the Corporation adopted a new discount rate and mortality table for annuities, the adoption would automati- cally alter the plan’s method of computing lump sums unless the plan was amended. Unfortunately for the Ameritech Management Pension Plan, the 1994 amendment changed only the plan provision specifying the discount rate, implying, at least on a literal reading, that the value of lump sums would be deter- mined by the old discount rate (PBGC) but by the new annuity mortality table (83GAM). A district court (in fact the same judge as in this case) held that by failing to delete the references to annuities in the provision relating to the mortality table, the plan was stuck with using the Corpora- tion’s new mortality table for annuities to calculate the plan’s lump sums. Malloy v. Ameritech Management Pension Plan, No. 98-488-GPM, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 20490 (S.D. Ill. Feb. 7, 2000). The Ameritech Plan did not appeal the Malloy decision, but instead accepted that the awkward combination of PBGC (low discount rate) with 83GAM (long life expectancies) was now the formula for determin- ing plan participants’ lump-sum entitlements, and that ERISA’s anti-cutback provision (of which more anon), 29 U.S.C. § 1054(g), clicked in, preventing the Plan from unilaterally withdrawing the windfall that the botched No. 05-4592 5

amendment and the Malloy decision had conferred on plan participants. The same year as that amendment to the plan, Congress passed the Retirement Protection Act of 1994, Pub. L. No. 103-465, 108 Stat. 4809, which required that lump-sum equivalents of defined-benefit annuities equal or exceed lump sums calculated by combining GATT for the dis- count rate with 83GAM for the life expectancies. These changes could produce a bigger or a smaller lump sum than under the previous life expectancies (UP84) and discount rate (PBGC), because while the new mortality table lengthened the life expectancies, the new method of computing the discount rate increased that rate, and we know that a longer life expectancy pushes the lump sum up but a higher discount rate pushes it down.

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