Cynthia Young v. Verizon's Bell Atlantic Cash B

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 10, 2010
Docket09-3872
StatusPublished

This text of Cynthia Young v. Verizon's Bell Atlantic Cash B (Cynthia Young v. Verizon's Bell Atlantic Cash B) 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
Cynthia Young v. Verizon's Bell Atlantic Cash B, (7th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit

Nos. 09-3872 & 09-3965

C YNTHIA N. Y OUNG, on behalf of herself and others similarly situated, Plaintiff-Appellant/ Cross-Appellee, v.

V ERIZON’S B ELL A TLANTIC C ASH B ALANCE P LAN, et al., Defendants-Appellees/ Cross-Appellants.

Appeals from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 05 C 07314—Morton Denlow, Magistrate Judge.

A RGUED JUNE 1, 2010—D ECIDED A UGUST 10, 2010

Before B AUER, F LAUM, and T INDER, Circuit Judges. T INDER, Circuit Judge. “People make mistakes. Even administrators of ERISA plans.” Conkright v. Frommert, 130 S. Ct. 1640, 1644 (2010). This introduction was fitting 2 Nos. 09-3872 & 09-3965

in Conkright, which dealt with a single honest mistake in the interpretation of an ERISA plan. It is perhaps an understatement in this case, which involves a devastating drafting error in the multi-billion-dollar plan admin- istered by Verizon Communications, Inc. (“Verizon”). Verizon’s pension plan contains erroneous language that, if enforced literally, would give Verizon pensioners like plaintiff Cynthia Young greater benefits than they expected. Young nonetheless seeks these additional benefits based on ERISA’s strict rules for enforcing plan terms as written. Although Young raises some forceful arguments, we conclude that ERISA’s rules are not so strict as to deny an employer equitable relief from the type of “scrivener’s error” that occurred here. We will accordingly affirm the district court’s judgment granting Verizon equitable reformation of its plan to correct the scrivener’s error.

I. Background A. Bell Atlantic’s Pension Plans Bell Atlantic, the predecessor of Verizon, operated the Bell Atlantic Management Pension Plan (“BAMPP”) until 1996. The BAMPP expressed an employee’s retirement benefit as a defined annuity, but employees also had the option of receiving a lump sum if they retired during specified “cashout windows.” For certain employees who retired during the 1994-1995 cashout window, the BAMPP provided a lump sum equal to the “actuarial equivalent present value” of the employee’s pension Nos. 09-3872 & 09-3965 3

benefit, but calculated using an enhanced discount rate. Specifically, section 4.19 of the BAMPP required the use of a discount rate of “120% of the applicable . . . PBGC [Public Benefit Guarantee Corporation] interest rate in effect” at the time of severance. In 1996, Bell Atlantic adopted the Bell Atlantic Cash Balance Plan to replace the BAMPP. The new Plan ex- pressed an employee’s benefit as a cash balance that grew steadily with the employee’s age and years of service. Under the Cash Balance Plan, employees still had the option of receiving their retirement benefit as either an annuity or a lump sum. Key to this transition to the Cash Balance Plan was converting the value of employees’ benefits under the old BAMPP to cash balances under the new Plan. The Plan used “transition factors,” a series of multipliers that increased with employees’ age and years of service, to make the conversion. The Plan language describing this conversion is critical, so we reproduce it in some detail (the emphasis is ours): 16.5 Opening Balance .... 16.5.1 Pension Conversions as of the Transition Date Where a present value must be determined under this Section 16.4 [sic, should read “Section 16.5”], the present value shall be determined as follows: (a) using the PBGC interest rates which were in effect for Septem- ber of 1995 . . . . 4 Nos. 09-3872 & 09-3965

16.5.1(a) 1995 Active Participants and 1995 Former Active Participants . . . the opening balance of the Participant’s Cash Balance Account on January 1, 1996 shall be the amount described in subsection (1) or (2) below, as applicable: 16.5.1(a)(1) If Eligible for Service Pension .... 16.5.1(a)(2) Not Eligible for Service Pen- sion In the case of a Participant who is not eligible for a Service Pension under the 1995 BAMPP Plan as of the Transition Date, the amount described in this para- graph (2) is the product of multiplying (A) the Participant’s applicable Transition Factor described in Table 1 of this Section, times (B) the lump-sum cashout value of the Accrued Benefit payable at age 65 under the 1995 BAMPP Plan, determined as if the Partici- pant had a Severance From Service Date on December 31, 1995, based on Compen- sation paid through December 31, 1995, multiplied by the applicable transition factor described in Table 1 of this Section. . . .

B. Young’s Administrative Claim Cynthia Young worked for Bell Atlantic from 1965 to 1997. When the Cash Balance Plan took effect in 1996, Nos. 09-3872 & 09-3965 5

Young was not eligible for a service pension under the BAMPP—that is, her age and service level did not qualify her for full retirement benefits—so her opening cash balance was calculated using § 16.5.1(a)(2), for a resulting balance of $240,127. By the time Young retired in 1997, her cash balance had grown to the point that she received a lump-sum benefit of $286,095. Several years later, in 2004, Young filed a claim with the Claims Review Unit of Verizon (which by then had taken over Plan administration as Bell Atlantic’s suc- cessor). Young claimed that Bell Atlantic made two errors in calculating her opening cash balance, and hence her ultimate pension benefit, under the Cash Balance Plan. First, Young read the language of § 16.5.1(a)(2) to require that the “applicable transition factor” be multi- plied twice to convert her lump-sum cashout under the BAMPP to her opening cash balance under the new Plan. Bell Atlantic, however, multiplied the transition factor only once when making the conversion. Second, Young claimed that Bell Atlantic improperly applied the 120% PBGC discount rate used in the 1995 BAMPP to determine the “lump-sum cashout value” under § 16.5.1(a)(2). Young contended that Bell Atlantic should have used a discount rate of simply 100% of the PBGC rate. Verizon’s Claims Review Unit denied Young’s claims, and on appeal, Verizon’s Claims Review Committee affirmed. The Committee concluded that the intended meaning of § 16.5.1(a)(2) was to use only a single transi- tion factor to calculate opening cash balances; the 6 Nos. 09-3872 & 09-3965

section’s second reference to the “applicable transition factor” was a drafting mistake. As for Young’s discount rate claim, the Committee concluded that § 16.5.1(a)(2) incorporated the 120% PBGC rate used in the 1995 BAMPP by referring to “the lump-sum cashout value . . . under the 1995 BAMPP Plan.”

C. Young’s Federal Court Class Action In 2005, Young brought a federal court action under ERISA § 502(a), 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a), against Verizon and its Cash Balance Plan (collectively “Verizon”). Young asserted the same claims she raised in Verizon’s admin- istrative process, arguing that Verizon improperly applied only a single transition factor and the 120% PBGC discount rate to calculate her opening cash balance. The parties agreed to treat the case as a class action, and the district court certified a class of some 14,000 Bell Atlantic/Verizon pensioners similarly situated to Young. Young’s class action presented the district court, acting through Magistrate Judge Denlow, with a challenge. The court was confronted with a convoluted ERISA plan that seemed to contain a costly drafting error, but an uncertain state of law on the scope of the court’s review of such an error. So the court decided to bifurcate the trial into two phases and apply alternative standards of review. In the first phase, the court assumed that it was limited to examining the administrative record and reviewing the Verizon Review Committee’s denial of benefits under a deferential standard.

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