Laura Divane v. Northwestern University

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMarch 25, 2020
Docket18-2569
StatusPublished

This text of Laura Divane v. Northwestern University (Laura Divane v. Northwestern University) 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
Laura Divane v. Northwestern University, (7th Cir. 2020).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________ No. 18-2569 LAURA L. DIVANE, et al., Plaintiffs-Appellants, v.

NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY, et al., Defendants-Appellees. ____________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 1:16-cv-08157 — Jorge L. Alonso, Judge. ____________________

ARGUED MAY 23, 2019 — DECIDED MARCH 25, 2020 ____________________

Before BAUER, MANION, and BRENNAN, Circuit Judges. BRENNAN, Circuit Judge. Laura Divane and other plain- tiffs,1 beneficiaries of employee investment plans, sued North- western University for allegedly breaching its fiduciary duties under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, 29

1 April Hughes, Susan Bona, Katherine, Lancaster, and Jasmine Walker. 2 No. 18-2569

U.S.C. § 1001, et seq. The district court found no breach. Nei- ther do we, so we affirm. I There are two ERISA defined-contribution plans at issue in this case: the Northwestern University Retirement Plan and the Northwestern University Voluntary Savings Plan. Under the Retirement Plan, participating Northwestern University employees can contribute a portion of their salary to their account and Northwestern makes a matching contribution. Employees participating in the Voluntary Savings Plan also contribute a portion of their salary, but Northwestern does not make a matching contribution. Both plans allow partici- pants to choose the investments into which the money in their account is invested and to choose among the investment op- tions assembled by the plans’ fiduciaries. Each plaintiff par- ticipates in one or both plans. Northwestern is the administrator and designated fiduci- ary of both plans. It assigned some of its fiduciary administra- tive duties to university officials2 and established a Retirement Investment Committee comprised of individual university officers3 who exercised discretionary authority in managing the plans’ assets. All are named defendants in this suit, and we collectively refer to them as “Northwestern” or “defendants.”

2 These officials include the university’s executive vice president, Nimalam Chinniah, and former executive vice president, Eugene Sun- shine. 3The Committee members are Ronald Braeutigam, Kathleen Hagerty, Craig Johnson, Candy Lee, William McLean, Ingrid Stafford, and Pamela Beemer. No. 18-2569 3

Displeased with the administration of the plans, plaintiffs sued Northwestern for allegedly breaching its fiduciary du- ties under ERISA. Plaintiffs’ amended complaint4 is massive: 287 paragraphs over 141 pages. Most of plaintiffs’ allegations, though, are not specific to certain defendants or to the plans here. For example, plaintiffs object to a wide range or mix of investment options, noting that approach can overwhelm an unsophisticated investor. They believe too many choices leaves the average investor with the “virtually impossible burden” of deciding where to place their money. Before October 2016, the plans offered investments through the Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association of America and College Retirement Equities Fund (TIAA-CREF) as well as Fidelity Management Trust Company. The Retire- ment Plan offered 242 investment options, and the Voluntary Savings Plan offered 187 options. Among the available op- tions were mutual funds and insurance company annuities.5

4 Plaintiffs filed their initial complaint on August 17, 2016, alleging two counts for breach of the defendants’ duties of loyalty and prudence due to unreasonable administrative and management fees and performance losses, and one count for failure to monitor designated fiduciaries. Plain- tiffs filed an amended complaint on December 15, 2016, adding three ad- ditional counts for prohibited transactions based on the same alleged breach conduct. In both complaints, plaintiffs requested a jury trial. 5 These options represent a variety of investment offerings ranging from conservative to more aggressive. The annuity options offered here in- cluded fixed annuities, which provide participants with the assurance that they will have a stable income in retirement, and variable annuities, which carry some additional risk for the investor but allow for the possibility of a greater return. 4 No. 18-2569

In the four months leading up to October, these options were narrowed into four tiered categories from which partic- ipants could select their preferred investments:  Tier 1: Target-date mutual funds that automatically rebalance their portfolios to become more con- servative as the funds reach their target dates;  Tier 2: Five index funds with a pre-selected set of stocks that eliminate trading and selection costs;  Tier 3: 26 actively managed funds in which a man- ager or management team selects stocks;  Tier 4: A full-service, self-directed brokerage win- dow through which the participant invests his or her plan assets. By October, Northwestern had streamlined its investment offerings to about 40 options to enable “simpler decision- making by participants, reduce administrative expenses, in- crease participant returns, and provide access to lower cost shares when available.” Appellant Br. at 9. Plaintiffs argue Northwestern’s conduct in adjusting its offerings should be treated as proof that its pre-2016 offerings were imprudent. One of the TIAA-CREF investments that remained availa- ble to plan participants post-2016 was the TIAA-CREF Traditional Annuity, a fixed annuity contract that returns a guaranteed, contractually specified minimum interest rate. The Traditional Annuity has “severe restrictions and penal- ties for withdrawal,” including a 2.5% surrender charge if a participant withdraws the investment in a lump sum sooner than 120 days after the termination of her employment. TIAA policy dictates that if the Traditional Annuity is offered as part of an investment plan, that plan must also offer the TIAA- No. 18-2569 5

CREF Stock Account fund and use TIAA as the recordkeeper for all TIAA offerings. Plaintiffs complain that the Stock Ac- count charges excessive fees and has not historically per- formed well. Among the fees included in a fund’s expense ratio are costs for recordkeeping. Defined contribution plans require recordkeepers to track the amount of each participant’s ac- count and how the account is allocated among investment op- tions. Recordkeepers also maintain websites for participants and sometimes provide investment advice or education ma- terials. One way that plans (including those in this case) pay for recordkeeping is to have the fund that collects the expense ratio share part of the expense ratio with the recordkeeper. Plaintiffs alleged Northwestern should have paid record- keeping costs by assessing a flat annual fee based on the num- ber of participants in each plan. Specifically, plaintiffs alleged that some of the plan funds charged retail-rate expense ratios to cover recordkeeping rather than institutional-rate expense ratios. According to plaintiffs, a reasonable rate for record- keeping fees would have been $35 per participant per year. The amended complaint reflects that plan participants paid an average of $54 to $87 per year for the Voluntary Savings Plan and an average of $153 to $213 per year for the Retire- ment Plan.6 Plaintiffs argued these expenses are even higher for plans that use multiple recordkeepers, as was the case here.

6 Plaintiffs allege that in 2015, the Voluntary Savings Plan held $530 mil- lion and had 12,293 participants while the Retirement Plan held $2.34 bil- lion and had 21,622 participants. 6 No. 18-2569

Six days before discovery was scheduled to close, plain- tiffs sought leave to file a second amended complaint alleging four new counts for breach of fiduciary duty. Aside from the four new counts, the second amended complaint mirrored the causes of action and claims in the amended complaint.

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