Hayes v. Twin City Carpenters & Joiners Pension Plan

CourtDistrict Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedJuly 10, 2019
Docket0:17-cv-05267
StatusUnknown

This text of Hayes v. Twin City Carpenters & Joiners Pension Plan (Hayes v. Twin City Carpenters & Joiners Pension Plan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hayes v. Twin City Carpenters & Joiners Pension Plan, (mnd 2019).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA

Steven Hayes, File No. 17-cv-05267 (ECT/BRT) Plaintiff,

v.

OPINION AND ORDER Twin City Carpenters & Joiners Pension

Plan, et al.

Defendants.

Gregory R. Merz and John M. Nichols, Gray Plant Mooty, Minneapolis, MN for Plaintiff Steven Hayes.

Amanda R. Cefalu and Henry M. Helgen, III, Kutak Rock, Minneapolis, MN for Defendants Twin City Carpenters & Joiners Pension Plan, et al.

In this ERISA lawsuit, Plaintiff Steven Hayes seeks to recover pension benefits from Defendant Twin City Carpenters & Joiners Pension Plan (“the Plan”). The Plan began paying Hayes a monthly retirement benefit in March 2011. The Plan suspended his benefits in October 2013, after receiving information suggesting Hayes may have violated a Plan rule that prohibited pensioners from working in certain employment for forty hours or more per month. Following a lengthy administrative-appeal process, the Plan’s Claim Appeals Committee affirmed the initial decision to suspend Hayes’s benefits. Hayes and Defendants have filed cross-motions for summary judgment. Should their summary-judgment motion be denied with respect to Hayes’s benefit claim, Defendants alternatively seek remand of that claim. Defendants’ summary-judgment motion will be granted against Hayes’s breach-of-fiduciary duty claim. The benefits claim will be remanded to the Committee for further consideration consistent with this Opinion and Order and in all other respects, the Parties’ summary-judgment motions will be denied. To

summarize, the administrative process that led to the decision to suspend Hayes’s benefits was flawed, though not so seriously as to warrant heightened or de novo review of the Committee’s final decision. But the Committee’s decision cannot survive abuse-of-discretion review. This is because the Committee adjudicated Hayes’s claim under inapplicable Plan terms, nothing about the Committee’s decision or adjudicative

process suggests it considered or construed applicable terms that, when examined closely, are materially different from the terms the Committee considered, and the terms the Committee should have applied pose significant interpretive challenges. Because it remains unclear whether Hayes is entitled to the benefits he seeks, a remand is the appropriate remedy.

I1 December 2010 to March 1, 2011—Hayes applies for, and is approved to receive, unreduced early retirement benefits under the Plan. The Plan is a multi-employer pension

1 The facts in this section are taken from the Complaint, Answer, and documents in the administrative record of Hayes’s pension-benefit claim and, unless noted otherwise, are undisputed. The Parties did not jointly file the entire administrative record. Instead, Hayes and Defendants each separately filed a subset of documents from the record that each considers relevant to the pending motions. See Merz Aff. ¶¶ 2–3, Exs. A, B (filed by Hayes) [ECF No. 41]; Cefalu Aff. ¶¶ 2–3, Ex. 1 (filed by Defendants) [ECF No. 37]. Many documents were filed by both Hayes and Defendants; some documents were filed by only one or the other. Regardless, the Parties’ administrative-record submissions share identical pagination (appearing in the lower right corner of each document beginning with the prefix “CARPS”). Therefore, and in the interests of convenience and efficiency, citations to fund, Compl. ¶¶ 2, 7 [ECF No. 1]; Answer ¶ 2 [ECF No. 9], and Hayes is a participant in the Plan, Compl. ¶¶ 6, 13; Answer ¶¶ 6, 13. In December 2010, Hayes applied to the Plan for “Unreduced Early Retirement Benefit[s]” commencing March 1, 2011. AR 423–25,

see also AR 755, 1192–93; Defs.’ Mem. in Supp. at 4 [ECF No. 39]; Pl.’s Mem. in Supp. at 4 [ECF No. 40]. In his application, Hayes identified February 28, 2011, as the last date he “worked, or will work, in the Construction Industry.” AR 423. The Plan prohibited retired participants who received benefits from being employed or engaging in work under certain circumstances. AR 770–74, 1194–97. The Plan referred to this generally as

“Disqualifying Employment”—as in, employment that, if engaged in by the retiree, might disqualify the retiree from receiving benefits. AR 770, 1194–95.2 In his application for benefits, Hayes acknowledged his obligation to comply with these limitations. AR 425. The Plan approved Hayes’s claim and began paying a monthly benefit effective March 1, 2011. AR 422.

October 2013—The Plan suspends Hayes’s benefits for engaging in Disqualifying Employment. In a letter dated October 15, 2013, the Plan, through its Fund Administrator, notified Hayes that it had “been informed that [he was] performing Disqualifying Employment while continuing to receive [his] pension,” and that as a result his pension

documents from the administrative record will appear in this Opinion and Order with the prefix “AR” and reference to the page number, simply as “AR __,” regardless of filer.

2 The Plan was designed to restrict certain pensioners from competing for jobs with active union-member Plan participants. See Eisenrich v. Minneapolis Retail Meat Cutters & Food Handlers Pension Plan, 574 F.3d 644, 649 (8th Cir. 2009) (citation omitted) (describing the purpose and importance of Congress “allowing [ERISA] plans to suspend the benefits of retirees who accept certain kinds of postretirement employment”). benefits would be “suspended effective November 1, 2013.” AR 329–31. Under the Plan, as the Administrator explained in the letter, “Disqualifying Employment” was: “Any employment of forty (40) hours or more in a one (1) month period in Covered Employment

(defined as Employment for which an Employer has agreed to contribute to the Pension Fund pursuant to the terms of a written Collective Bargaining Agreement or Participation Agreement).” AR 330. The Administrator also quoted an “exception” to the general suspension-of-benefit rule as follows: Effective April 1, 2007, if you work more than forty (40) hours per month in Covered Employment, the Plan will not suspend your benefit unless your work in Covered Employment in that month and the previous eleven (11) months totals more than four hundred eighty (480) hours. If you have worked or been paid for four hundred eighty (480) or more hours in Covered Employment in the last twelve (12) months, your benefit will be suspended. If you have worked or been paid for any Disqualifying Employment that is not Covered Employment during the twelve (12) month period, you are not eligible for this exception to the rule and the Plan will suspend your benefit for any month in which you work more than forty (40) hours in Disqualifying Employment.

Id. The Administrator did not say whether it had considered this exception in Hayes’s case. See AR 329–31. The Administrator notified Hayes that, to obtain reinstatement of his pension benefit, he “must cease working in Disqualifying Employment and notify [the Plan] in writing that [he had] done so.” AR 331. The Administrator requested copies of Hayes’s tax returns for the years 2011, 2012, and 2013, and notified Hayes “that any pension payments [he] previously received while working in Disqualifying Employment will need to be reimbursed to the Plan.” Id. The Administrator explained that, if he believed the suspension of his benefits was erroneous, Hayes could “contact the Administrator to provide any information [he] may have to assist in resolving this issue.” Id. The Administrator also informed Hayes that he had “the right to appeal this decision to the Board of Trustees” and referred Hayes to the appeal-rights provisions of the

Summary Plan Description. Id.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

New York Times Co. v. Sullivan
376 U.S. 254 (Supreme Court, 1964)
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.
477 U.S. 242 (Supreme Court, 1986)
Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v. Bruch
489 U.S. 101 (Supreme Court, 1989)
Metropolitan Life Insurance v. Glenn
554 U.S. 105 (Supreme Court, 2008)
Khoury v. Group Health Plan, Inc.
615 F.3d 946 (Eighth Circuit, 2010)
Wrenn Ex Rel. S.W. v. Principal Life Insurance
636 F.3d 921 (Eighth Circuit, 2011)
Eileen M. Huss v. IBM Medical and D
418 F. App'x 498 (Seventh Circuit, 2011)
Green v. Union Security Insurance
646 F.3d 1042 (Eighth Circuit, 2011)
Frye v. Thompson Steel Co., Inc.
657 F.3d 488 (Seventh Circuit, 2011)
McClelland v. Life Insurance Co. of North America
679 F.3d 755 (Eighth Circuit, 2012)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Hayes v. Twin City Carpenters & Joiners Pension Plan, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayes-v-twin-city-carpenters-joiners-pension-plan-mnd-2019.