Jack R. Holland, George Rush, Truman Manning, Henry D. Zobell, and v. Valhi Incorporated, a Delaware Corporation Harold Simmons, Trustee, and and the Amalgamated Sugar Company, a Utah Corporation the Amalgamated Sugar Company Retirement Plan Committee, and Jack R. Holland, George E. Rush, Truman Manning, Henry D. Zobell v. Valhi Incorporated, a Delaware Corporation the Amalgamated Sugar Company, a Utah Corporation the Amalgamated Sugar Company Retirement Plan Committee Harold Simmons, Trustee

22 F.3d 968
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedJune 13, 1994
Docket92-4049
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 22 F.3d 968 (Jack R. Holland, George Rush, Truman Manning, Henry D. Zobell, and v. Valhi Incorporated, a Delaware Corporation Harold Simmons, Trustee, and and the Amalgamated Sugar Company, a Utah Corporation the Amalgamated Sugar Company Retirement Plan Committee, and Jack R. Holland, George E. Rush, Truman Manning, Henry D. Zobell v. Valhi Incorporated, a Delaware Corporation the Amalgamated Sugar Company, a Utah Corporation the Amalgamated Sugar Company Retirement Plan Committee Harold Simmons, Trustee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jack R. Holland, George Rush, Truman Manning, Henry D. Zobell, and v. Valhi Incorporated, a Delaware Corporation Harold Simmons, Trustee, and and the Amalgamated Sugar Company, a Utah Corporation the Amalgamated Sugar Company Retirement Plan Committee, and Jack R. Holland, George E. Rush, Truman Manning, Henry D. Zobell v. Valhi Incorporated, a Delaware Corporation the Amalgamated Sugar Company, a Utah Corporation the Amalgamated Sugar Company Retirement Plan Committee Harold Simmons, Trustee, 22 F.3d 968 (10th Cir. 1994).

Opinion

22 F.3d 968

Jack R. HOLLAND, George Rush, Truman Manning, Henry D.
Zobell, Plaintiffs-Appellees and Cross-Appellants,
v.
VALHI INCORPORATED, a Delaware corporation; Harold Simmons,
Trustee, Defendants and Cross-Appellees,
and
The Amalgamated Sugar Company, a Utah corporation; The
Amalgamated Sugar Company Retirement Plan
Committee, Defendants-Appellants and
Cross-Appellees.
Jack R. HOLLAND, George E. Rush, Truman Manning, Henry D.
Zobell, Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
VALHI INCORPORATED, a Delaware corporation; The Amalgamated
Sugar Company, a Utah corporation; The Amalgamated Sugar
Company Retirement Plan Committee; Harold Simmons, Trustee,
Defendants-Appellees.

Nos. 92-4049, 92-4054 and 92-4183.

United States Court of Appeals,
Tenth Circuit.

April 19, 1994.
Order Denying Rehearing and Suggestion
for Rehearing En Banc
June 13, 1994.

Jean Reed Haynes (Thomas E. Dutton with her on the brief), of Kirkland & Ellis, Chicago, IL (James S. Jardine and A. Robert Thorup of Ray, Quinney & Nebeker, Salt Lake City, UT, with her on the brief), for defendants-appellants/cross-appellees (Nos. 92-4049, 92-4054) and for defendants-appellees (No. 92-4183).

Claudia F. Berry (Brent R. Armstrong, Stewart M. Hanson, Jr., and Fred R. Silvester with her on the brief), of Suitter, Axland, Armstrong & Hanson, Salt Lake City, UT, for plaintiffs-appellees/cross-appellants (Nos. 92-4049, 92-4054) and for plaintiffs-appellants (No. 92-4183).

Before TACHA, SETH and BRIGHT,* Circuit Judges.

BRIGHT, Senior Circuit Judge.

The Amalgamated Sugar Company made an arrangement in 1986 for the excess funds in its pension plan for non-bargaining employees to be paid to the employer and a small amount of the reversion to be paid to its retirees. This was to be accomplished by what is termed a "spin-off termination" in which Amalgamated used contributions to the plans to purchase annuities to fund future obligations under the pension plans. Under a spinoff termination, excess funds are to be paid to the employer and the employees who had contributed to those funds. A spinoff arrangement and determination of splitting the residual funds between employer and retiree contributors call for very complicated accounting and actuarial calculations. In this case, the employee class (collectively referred to as "Retirees") objected to the allocation of the residual funds and brought this action under ERISA Sec. 502, 29 U.S.C. Sec. 1132, against the defendants, The Amalgamated Sugar Company and The Amalgamated Sugar Company Retirement Plan Committee (collectively referred to as "Amalgamated"), asserting that defendants violated their fiduciary duties to the former employees under the plan. The district court1 787 F.Supp. 996 made findings in favor of the plaintiffs and increased substantially the class share of residual funds from the spinoff and awarded costs and attorney's fees. Both sides appeal.

In Amalgamated's appeal, these defendants assert compliance with the governing law and regulations and seek dismissal of the action and non-liability for fees and costs.

The plaintiffs-retirees seek all of the residuary funds plus an increase in attorney's fees and reimbursement for actual expenses of expert witnesses.

We affirm the district court's determination of Amalgamated's right to a reversion upon termination of the Retirees' Plan, but reverse and remand for redetermination of the amount of that reversionary interest.

I. BACKGROUND

Amalgamated began offering its employees an opportunity to participate in a defined retirement plan in 1953.2 Section 14.4 of the 1953 Plan provided for "Distribution Upon Termination" as follows:

If after satisfaction of all liabilities with respect to members, retired members, former members, and joint annuitants under the Plan, there is a balance remaining due to erroneous actuarial computation, the balance shall be paid by the Trustee to the Company.

Amendments to the 1953 Plan which would adversely affect plan members required a consenting vote of at least 75% of the members. 1953 Plan Sec. 13.2.

Amalgamated amended the 1953 Plan in both 1970 and 1976, resulting in both the deletion of the clause requiring consent of at least 75% of all plan members for adoption of adverse amendments, and replacement and update as to any reversion clause. These changes are not relevant to this appeal.

Plan amendments eliminated employee contributions in 1980. Participants under the 1976 Plan who had retired prior to October 1, 1980, did not, however, receive any refund of employee contributions, whereas participants who were active employees as of that date received a refund of all prior contributions and interest at the rate provided by the Plan. Of the plaintiff class, forty-five participants or their beneficiaries received a refund pursuant to the 1980 Amendments.

A surplus in the pension plan arose in 1981 due to higher than expected returns on investments and a change in the interest rate assumptions. The 1976 or Non-Bargaining Plan, as amended, was split into two plans in 1986, one for active and deferred vested participants who were not yet receiving benefits (Continuing Salaried Plan), and another for retired employees who were receiving plan benefits as of July 1, 1986 (Retirees' Plan). Amalgamated created the two separate plans to implement a spinoff termination, which would allow Amalgamated to recoup excess assets.3 Amalgamated terminated the Retirees' Plan effective August 11, 1986, as we have observed; the reversion of surplus assets to Amalgamated following the termination is the subject of the present lawsuit.

As of December 1, 1986, the value of assets in the Continuing Salaried Plan equaled $21,594,005.00. Amalgamated had purchased an annuity for the Continuing Salaried Plan for $7,745,300.00 to cover accrued benefit liabilities calculated on a termination basis. Amalgamated then transferred the balance of $13,848,705.00 to the Retirees' Plan; a second annuity was then purchased reflecting the liability under the Retirees' Plan, $8,472,200.00, resulting in surplus or residual assets of $5,376,505.00 in the Retirees' Plan.4

Amalgamated retained the services of an accounting firm, Coopers & Lybrand, to implement the spinoff termination. Amalgamated directed the accounting firm to assume that no employee assets remained in the Retirees' Plan. Coopers & Lybrand thus assumed that none of the Retirees' Plan participants were entitled to any portion of the residual assets. Amalgamated's contribution to the Retirees' Plan equaled $9,443,452.09, whereas employee contributions to that plan totaled $3,031,839.11. Pursuant to the 1980 Amendments, $536,746.17 had been refunded to forty-five members of the retirees class or their beneficiaries.5

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