CITY OF PONTIAC RETIRED EMPLOYEES v. Schimmel

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedAugust 3, 2023
Docket2:12-cv-12830
StatusUnknown

This text of CITY OF PONTIAC RETIRED EMPLOYEES v. Schimmel (CITY OF PONTIAC RETIRED EMPLOYEES v. Schimmel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
CITY OF PONTIAC RETIRED EMPLOYEES v. Schimmel, (E.D. Mich. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN SOUTHERN DIVISION

THE CITY OF PONTIAC RETIRED EMPLOYEES ASSOCIATION, DELMER ANDERSON, THOMAS HUNTER, Case Number 12-12830 HENRY C. SHOEMAKER, YVETTE Honorable David M. Lawson TALLEY, and DEBRA WOODS, on behalf of themselves and all others similarly situated,

Plaintiffs,

v.

LOUIS SCHIMMEL, INDIVIDUALLY AND IN HIS OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS EMERGENCY MANAGER OF THE CITY OF PONTIAC, CATHY SQUARE, INDIVIDUALLY AND IN HER OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS THE DIRECTOR OF HUMAN RESOURCES AND LABOR RELATIONS FOR THE CITY OF PONTIAC, and the CITY OF PONTIAC,

Defendants. _______________________________________________/

OPINION AND ORDER DENYING PLAINTIFFS’ MOTION TO MODIFY CONSENT JUDGMENT

In this class proceeding, the plaintiffs move to modify a provision of a consent judgment entered by the Honorable Avern Cohn in 2018. The consent judgment resolved a dispute between the City of Pontiac and its former employees over the continuation of retiree health benefits by, among other things, establishing a new trust to provide health benefits for the City’s retirees. The question presented is whether the Court should modify the consent judgment to require the perpetuation of an interim monthly $400 stipend that was intended to cover health insurance premiums for retirees during the time required for full implementation of other terms of the agreement, which required the City to establish and fund a new benefit plan to take over the obligations of the old retirement plan. The motion was filed in June 2022. The parties asked the Court to defer ruling on it while they attempted to negotiate a resolution. They apparently reached an impasse, and the Court heard oral arguments on July 18, 2023. Modifying a consent judgment absent an agreement by the affected parties requires a showing that the “decree ‘has been turned through changing circumstances into an instrument of wrong.’” Waste Mgmt. of Ohio, Inc. v. City

of Dayton, 132 F.3d 1142, 1146 (6th Cir. 1997) (quoting United States v. Knote, 29 F.3d 1297, 1302 (8th Cir. 1994)). Because the plaintiffs have not carried that burden, their motion will be denied. I. The facts and history of this case are familiar to the parties. The Court summarized them in an opinion granting the plaintiffs’ earlier motion to enforce this same consent judgment. See ECF No. 103. Part of that summary is set forth here for convenience. The consent judgment entered by Judge Cohn on November 19, 2018, see ECF No. 95, resolved a dispute between the City of Pontiac and its former employees over the continuation of

retiree health benefits. A key provision of that consent judgment was the establishment of a new trust to provide health benefits for the City’s retirees. Six years earlier, in 2012, the City of Pontiac Retired Employees Association, along with several of its members, sued the City and then Emergency Manager (EM) Louis Schimmel. The plaintiffs proceeded on behalf of themselves and around 1,500 municipal retirees in a challenge to the EM’s order substituting a temporary monthly fixed benefit premium assistance payment in lieu of the City’s previous guarantee of lifetime retiree health coverage, which was to be reduced and eventually eliminated. Judge Lawrence Zatkoff denied a motion for preliminary injunction, but that ruling was reversed on appeal. Judge Cohn inherited the case on remand, and he subsequently presided over several years of intense negotiations between the parties. In March 2017, with the aid of a mediator, the parties finally hammered out an agreement by which the City would be relieved of any perpetual obligation to provide healthcare benefits, in exchange for its commitment to establish and fund a new retiree benefit trust fund, with the seed

money for the new fund to be provided largely by liquidation of the former retiree benefit plan. The City was obligated to make an initial payment of $4,250,000, with further annual payments to follow if further funding was determined to be necessary by an ongoing actuarial assessment. Judge Cohn certified a settlement class consisting of most of the City’s retirees, but excluding former employees of Pontiac General Hospital, whose employee association had attempted to intervene in the case. He later granted a motion to approve a proposed consent judgment after rejecting the objections of a handful of class members and a challenge to the propriety of the settlement by the hospital retirees. The approved consent judgment was entered by the Court on November 19, 2018.

While this case was pending, a separate suit was filed in state court by the City’s retired police officers and firefighters, who made up a subset of the class of retirees in this case. The consent judgment acknowledged the existence of that suit, and it provided that any payments made to settle the claims in that case would be credited against the City’s funding obligations assumed under the settlement in this case. The state lawsuit eventually was resolved by a similar agreement, and, in July 2019, judgment entered in the state court awarding $4,073,000 to the police and fire retiree benefit fund. The parties here concur that the judgment recovery in the separate litigation properly was deemed to satisfy the lion’s share of the City’s initial $4.25 million funding obligation under the terms of the consent judgment in this case. The parties subsequently brought before the Court a dispute over the deadline for the City’s remittance of the remaining approximately $176,000 in initial funding that was called for by the consent judgment. On April 6, 2021, the Court granted the plaintiffs’ motion to enforce the consent judgment and ordered the City “forthwith [to] tender the remainder of the funds due the New VEBA [Voluntary Employee Beneficiary Association] trust.” Op. & Order, ECF No. 103,

PageID.2414. The terms of the consent judgment were spelled out in the parties’ settlement agreement, which was made part of the record in this case and incorporated by reference into the consent judgment. The parties to the settlement agreement were identified as the City of Pontiac Retired Employees Association; the individuals named as plaintiffs and class representatives in this case, acting on behalf of themselves and absent members of the settlement class; the City of Pontiac; and its officials who were named as defendants. The agreement provided that the historical Pontiac General Employees Retirement System Pension Plan (“GERS”) would be terminated, and a new plan would be created and funded with assets equal to 130% of the liabilities of the old plan. Any

assets from the GERS liquidation in excess of 130% of plan liabilities were to be rolled over into a Voluntary Employee Beneficiary Association Plan (the “New VEBA Plan”), governed by Section 501(c)(9) of the Internal Revenue Code. That New VEBA Plan then would provide for ongoing retiree health benefits, and the City would be absolved of any perpetual obligation to supply the same. The City agreed that it would seek an IRS determination that the New VEBA Plan was appropriately constituted for tax-exempt status, and, upon receiving IRS approval, that it would pay initial funding into the plan trust fund. The parties also acknowledged the police and firefighters’ litigation and provided for the offset of any settlement funds paid by the City in that case.

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