Gediman v. Anheuser Busch

299 F.2d 537, 51 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2008, 1962 U.S. App. LEXIS 6058
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJanuary 30, 1962
Docket27075_1
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 299 F.2d 537 (Gediman v. Anheuser Busch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gediman v. Anheuser Busch, 299 F.2d 537, 51 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2008, 1962 U.S. App. LEXIS 6058 (2d Cir. 1962).

Opinion

299 F.2d 537

H. James GEDIMAN, as Executor of the Last Will and Testament
of James E. Barsi, Deceased, and George A. Barsi, as
Administrator with the Will annexed of the Estate of James
E. Barsi, Deceased, Plaintiffs-Cross Appellants,
v.
ANHEUSER BUSCH, INC., Defendant-Appellant.

No. 94, Docket 27075.

United States Court of Appeals Second Circuit.

Argued Nov. 29, 1961.
Decided Jan. 30, 1962.

Thomas Kiernan (White & Case), New York City (Thomas B. Leary, New York City, of counsel), for defendant-appellant.

Allen Moss (Meyer H. Slack), New York City (Herbert B. Rose, Edward Goodell, New York City, of counsel), for plaintiffs-cross appellants.

Before CLARK FRIENDLY and KAUFMAN, Circuit Judges.

FRIENDLY, Circuit Judge.

This action was brought in the Eastern District of New York by H. James Gediman, a resident of New York and executor under the will of James E. Barsi, admitted to probate in the Surrogate's Court of New York County, and George A. Barsi, administrator c.t.a. in California probate proceedings, against anheuser-Busch, Inc., a Missouri corporation, 28 U.S.C. 1332, for amounts allegedly due under the Company's pension plan or for misrepresentation in connection therewith. Judge Byers rendered a judgment in favor of plaintiffs for $73,754.02, which he held to be due under the pension plan, plus interest from November 17, 1957, and costs. Claiming only $32,780.44 to be owing, defendant has appealed; plaintiffs have taken a cross-appeal with respect to the dismissal of their alternative claim for misrepresentation. We hold that the Dsitrict Court erred in awarding judgment under the pension plan but that plaintiffs were entitled to recover on the basis that defendant negligently, although in good faith, misinformed Barsi as to the consequences of the election that he made upon retirement. Hence we reverse on both appeals, with a direction to enter judgment for plaintiffs as hereafter set forth.

As of November 1, 1947, Anheuser-busch had entered into a contract with The prudential Insurance Company of America for the issuance of retirement annunities to employees reaching the age of 65 or, in certain instances of prior retirement, an earlier age. Barsi was a participant in that plan, sometimes hereafter 'the Group Annuity Plan.' On November 1, 1952, the Group Annuity Plan was superseded by a Salaried Employees' Pension Plan, with St. Louis Union Trust Company as trustee.

The 1952 Plan provides that the Normal Retirement Date of any participant should be the first day of the month coinciding with or next following his 65th birthday; however, a participant, with the consent or at the request of the Company, might be sooner retired, at an Early Retirement Date. The plan defines 'Effective Benefit Date' as 'the date as of which the payment of his (a participant's) retirement or other severance benefits hereunder either commenced, or are scheduled to commence * * *' It says further that 'The Effective Benefit Date shall be the normal retirement date, although employment was previously terminated, unless an earlier date for the payment of benefits (called 'Early Benefit date'), shall have been selected and approved as hereinafter provided * * *' This has the effect, important as we shall see, that, for an employee retiring before normal retirement age, Early Retirement Date and Early Benefit Date are not at all equivalent terms; the former refers to a cessation of employment, the latter to a date, which may be the same or may be later, selected for benefits to begin and therefore in that event the Effective Benefit Date.

In stating the benefits to employees, the Plan Begins, Section 7, by a description of 'The normal retirement benefit, based on the assumption that employment and participation herein is continued to normal retirement date,' and of the 'basic method' of payment, to wit, 'an annual pension payable in equal monthly installments for the lifetime of the participant.' It then describes, Section 8, 'Alternate Methods of Distributing Lifetime Benefits,' permissible if 'on or before the Effective Benefit Date the participant shall have substituted, on the basis of their actuarial equivalent and with the approval of the Committee, one or more of the following 'alternate methods' of settlement.' One of these is 'The payment in one sum of the actuarial value of the benefit as of the Effective Benefit Date,' with the Pension Committee having the option to pay this in cash or 'by the purchase and transfer by Trustee of a commercial single premium annunity contract endorsed as the Committee may determine.' Next the Plan deals, Section 10, with Early Retirement Benefits. This section begins by saying that the normal retirement pension then accrued for an employee should be determined as provided in a formula therein described, and should 'become payable at normal retirement date, if he is then living.' However, at the employee's request, the Pension Committee may advance the Effective Benefit Date 'to the first day of any month occurring after such request and within ten (10) years of his normal retirement date, whereupon the accrued pension shall become payable on such Early Benefit Date, if the participant is then living, based on its actuarial value on such date * * *' Summarily stated, the amount that would have been payable if Barsi had become entitled to a pension would have been the sum of the actuarial values on the Effective Benefit Date of (1) his 'accrued past service pension,' i.e., for services before November 1, 1947, and (2) his 'accrued future service pension,'-- the latter being the proportion of the pension to which he would have been entitled for services after November 1, 1947, if he had retired at age 65, equal to the ratio which the number of years of his participation 'in this Plan and the Group Annuity Plan' bore to the number of years he would have participated had he remained in the Company's employ until that age.1 Finally, the Plan contains a provision, Section 12, establishing a benefit for males dying 'on or before the Effective Benefit Date'; this benefit is defined as 'the then actuarial value of the future service pension which * * * shall have accrued during his participation in this Plan.' All these provisions and others were set forth, in somewhat-- but not much-- simplified form, in a booklet distributed to participating employees.

Barsi retired on August 31, 1956, having been on a paid leave of absence for the previous year. On that date he wrote a long letter to August A. Busch, Jr., defendant's president. He requested Mr. Busch's personal 'consideration and action' in the direction of some adjustment in the pension plan which, Barsi thought, 'does not give proper weight and consideration to employees with my length of service,' to wit, 25 years, who had been obliged to retire early, for ill health, after a relatively brief participation. 'In case your consideration is not forthcoming,' he wrote, 'it leaves me no alternative but to make a most serious decision which I am not qualified to make, I am not fully informed of all the various phases and ramifications contained in the Pension charter.' However, if Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
299 F.2d 537, 51 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2008, 1962 U.S. App. LEXIS 6058, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gediman-v-anheuser-busch-ca2-1962.