Crowell v. Shell Oil Co.

541 F.3d 295, 44 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 1909, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 17229, 2008 WL 3485331
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 14, 2008
Docket07-20270
StatusPublished
Cited by80 cases

This text of 541 F.3d 295 (Crowell v. Shell Oil Co.) 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
Crowell v. Shell Oil Co., 541 F.3d 295, 44 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 1909, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 17229, 2008 WL 3485331 (5th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:

Former employees of Pennzoil, David Crowell and Paul Siegel, were terminated when the company changed control. Under Letters of Agreement referring to their retirement and savings plan, they received a cash payment when the company merged with Shell. They filed separate suits, urging that Defendants underpaid them and that state law applied. The district courts found that the agreement was governed by ERISA and consolidated the cases, granting summary judgment to Defendants. Plaintiffs appealed.

*298 I

David Crowell, formerly Pennzoil’s Director of Internal Audit, and Paul Siegel, formerly Pennzoil’s General Counsel, sued Shell and Pennzoil 1 in separate cases in Texas district court, alleging breach of contract, breach of warranty, and fraud under Texas law arising from a benefits dispute. They alleged that Defendants misconstrued amended language in their retirement plan — that when they cashed out stock options earlier in their career, the income earned was part of their “Considered Compensation” in Shell’s amended Plan, entitling them to a higher lump-sum payment for early retirement when Pennzoil merged with Shell in October of 2002 and terminated them.

Pennzoil’s original retirement plan — the Pennzoil-Quaker State Company Salaried Employees Retirement Plan 2 (“retirement plan”) — was effective as of January 1, 1999, and provided for pension benefits upon employees’ retirement or early retirement. The Plan was a deferred compensation plan that paid employees a certain percentage of their monthly 1997 “Considered Compensation,” multiplied by their number of years of service to the company and additional money also calculated by their 1997 “Considered Compensation,” their years of service accrued during certain time periods, monthly Considered Compensation, and monthly compensation after December 31, 1997. The higher the “Considered Compensation,” the higher the pension benefits to the employee. The retirement plan originally excluded “income arising from the exercise of a stock option” from the definition of Considered Compensation.

Pennzoil amended the definition of “Considered Compensation” in its retirement plan several times. The original plan provided for a monthly annuity calculated by a certain percentage of “monthly 1997 Considered Compensation” multiplied by the number of years of service, and it defined monthly 1997 Considered Compensation in the last paragraph of Section 9.1(1) as “the lesser of (I) 1997 Considered Compensation or (ii) if the Member terminates service prior to January 1, 2003, the Member’s average monthly Considered Compensation received during the 60 calendar months immediately preceding his retirement or other termination of service.” The Second Amendment changed this last paragraph in a modification effective January 1, 1999, which provided, “In determining monthly 1997 Considered Compensation, the following shall apply: (I) the term 1997 Considered Compensation shall be deemed to refer to the Member’s Considered Compensation for the Member’s 12 months of employment with the Employer immediately prior to January 1, 1998 ...” In other words, it cut out the “lesser of’ language and provided a simpler computation of Considered Compensation. The definition of Considered Compensation in effect under the original retirement plan (effective January 1, 1999) and the Second Amendment (also effective January 1, 1999) was “[t]he compensation actually paid to a Member ... by his Employer for personal services, including normal salary, wages, commissions ... but exclusive of ... income arising from the exercise of a stock option .. ,” 3 In other words, following the Second Amendment *299 to the plan, the definition of Considered Compensation continued to omit income from the exercise of stock options.

A Fifth Amendment to the retirement plan, adopted on May 13, 2002, amended the definition of Considered Compensation in its entirety and included the exercise of stock options as part of Considered Compensation, defining Considered Compensation as “[t]he compensation actually paid to a Member by his Employer for personal services, including normal salary, wages, commissions ... and income arising from the exercise or cash-out of a stock option, but exclusive of amounts of life insurance premiums paid by an employer ... ” 4 This Amendment had several effective dates. The Amendment stated, “Pennzoil-Quaker State Company ... does hereby amend the Plan, effective March 1, 2002, as follows.” It then made changes in Sections 1 and 2 to the definition of “Change of Control” and “Considered Compensation.” In a third section, it added a subsection entitled “Credit Union Employees” to Section 2.3 of the Salaried Employees Plan Document and specified that the third section was to be effective January 1, 2002.

In addition to the retirement plan, Pennzoil executed Letters of Agreement with some employees, including Crowell and Siegel. These Letters were unfunded deferred compensation arrangements and promised to pay the Letter recipients, upon a change in control of the company, a one-time cash payment. This payment was to compensate Crowell and Siegel for the amount of pension and savings money they would lose as a result of certain tax regulations. A determination of the amount of the one-time payment required a calculation of early retirement pension income under the retirement plan (a calculation relying upon the definition of 1997 Considered Compensation) and savings and invéstment income. Crowell’s Letter of Agreement, dated December 8, 2000, with an effective date of June 19, 1999, provided,

Section 415 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended ... imposes limitations on the amount of retirement benefits which may be payable with respect to any participating employee under the Pennzoil-Quaker State Company Salaried Employees Retirement Plan ... and imposes limitations on the amount of annual additions which may be made to the account of any participating employee under the Pennzoil-Quaker State Company Savings and Investment Plan.... [The letter then discussed other tax limitations.] As these limitations may curtail the retirement benefits which would otherwise be payable to you and your spouse under the Retirement Plan and may curtail the contributions which the Company would otherwise make to your account under the Savings Plan, the Board of Directors of the Company has authorized the Company’s direct payment to you and your spouse of certain amounts which are designed to recoup to you and your spouse any such losses ...

In sections 1 and 2, the letter provided for long-term payments to be made to the employee and his spouse to offset reductions in benefits caused by taxes. These payments included

monthly pension for life ... commencing on the date your ... Early Retirement ... commences under the Retirement Plan ... in an amount equal to any additional ... Early Retirement ... to which you would have been entitled under the Retirement Plan ..., if the limitations therein for the purpose of satis *300

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541 F.3d 295, 44 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 1909, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 17229, 2008 WL 3485331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crowell-v-shell-oil-co-ca5-2008.