Lockheed Martin Corp. v. Retail Holdings, N.V.

639 F.3d 63, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 8491, 2011 WL 1548952
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedApril 26, 2011
DocketDocket 09-2766-cv
StatusPublished
Cited by133 cases

This text of 639 F.3d 63 (Lockheed Martin Corp. v. Retail Holdings, N.V.) 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
Lockheed Martin Corp. v. Retail Holdings, N.V., 639 F.3d 63, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 8491, 2011 WL 1548952 (2d Cir. 2011).

Opinion

B.D. PARKER, JR., Circuit Judge:

Appellant Retail Holdings, N.V. (together with its predecessors, “New Singer”) appeals from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Griesa, /.), entered in favor of Appellee Lockheed Martin Corpo *65 ration (together with its predecessors, “Old Singer”) after a bench trial. The dispute revolves around the interpretation of a 1986 Reorganization and Distribution Agreement (the “Spin-Off Agreement”) between Appellee’s predecessor, The Singer Company, and Appellant’s predecessor, SSMC Inc. At issue is whether the SpinOff Agreement transferred a particular pension plan, the Executive Office Foreign Service Retirement Plan (the “EOFS Plan” or “Plan”), from Old Singer to New Singer. The Plan is overfunded, and the party with legal rights to it will gain control of approximately $6 million in cash and stock. The district court, relying on extrinsic evidence, concluded that the Spin-Off Agreement did not transfer the EOFS Plan to New Singer, and accordingly ruled that Old Singer is entitled to the disputed assets. Because we conclude that the contract admits of only one reasonable interpretation, which is that the Plan was transferred to New Singer, we reverse.

BACKGROUND

The EOFS Plan

The background of this controversy is complicated. As of the 1950s, Old Singer was engaged in the manufacture of Singer sewing machines and furniture. It was an international operation, with thousands of employees and numerous pension plans. In 1957, Old Singer established the EOFS Plan, a pension plan that covered certain Old Singer employees working overseas. 1

To satisfy its obligations under the Plan, Old Singer purchased Group Annuity Contract No. 365F (“GAC 365F”) from the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company (“MetLife”), a nominal defendant. GAC 365F required MetLife to pay pension benefits to EOFS Plan participants once they retired. The Plan was funded by contributions from Old Singer and participating employees. Pursuant to GAC 365F, Met-Life deposited these contributions into an account called the Annuity Purchase Payment Reserve (the “APPR”). Significant for purposes of this dispute, Section 11.2 of the EOFS Plan provides that upon termination, any “residual assets” of the Plan not required to be distributed to participants and beneficiaries in accordance with ERISA § 4044(d) would revert to Old Singer.

In 1972, the EOFS Plan was “frozen”— i.e., closed to new participants — and another plan was initiated to provide retirement benefits to Old Singer’s overseas employees. However, existing EOFS Plan participants were permitted to continue participating in the EOFS Plan. Accordingly, the EOFS Plan continued to provide benefits to already-retired participants and, over time, to new retirees who had been covered by the EOFS Plan when it was closed.

The Spin-Off Agreement

During the 1970s, Old Singer expanded into new fields, including aerospace technology, and in the 1980s, decided to focus exclusively on its aerospace pursuits and to spin off its sewing and furniture businesses. Old Singer carried out this plan in 1986 by executing the Spin-Off Agreement with New Singer (then a subsidiary of Old Singer known as SSMC Inc.). Pursuant to the Agreement, Old Singer was split into two entities: New Singer, which acquired the sewing and furniture businesses, and Old Singer, which retained the aerospace technology businesses.

*66 Articles II and IV of the contract contain broad asset and liability transfer provisions designed to effectuate the spin-off. The principal such provision, Section 2.01, provides that:

[Old] Singer has exercised reasonable efforts to cause all of [Old] Singer’s right, title and interest in the SSMC Assets and all of its duties, obligations and responsibilities under the SSMC Group Liabilities to be transferred to [New Singer] prior to the Transfer Date [a date on or before July 18, 1986].... Whether or not all of the SSMC Assets or the SSMC Group Liabilities have been legally transferred to [New Singer] prior to the Transfer Date, the parties agree that, as of the Transfer Date, [New Singer] shall have, and shall be deemed to have acquired, complete and sole beneficial ownership over all of the SSMC Assets, together with all of [Old] Singer’s rights, powers and privileges incident thereto, and shall be deemed to have assumed ... all of the SSMC Group Liabilities, and all of [Old] Singer’s duties, obligations and responsibilities incident thereto.

The Agreement defines “SSMC Assets” as “collectively, all of the assets of the sewing and related products and furniture businesses of [Old] Singer and its subsidiaries and Affiliates, which shall include, without limitation, all rights of [Old] Singer, its Affiliates and subsidiaries under contracts ... relating to the sewing and/or furniture businesses.” “SSMC Group Liabilities” are defined as “collectively, all of the Liabilities of [Old] Singer and its subsidiaries which are assumed by [New Singer] pursuant to Article IV or VIII [of the Agreement].”

Article IV, titled “Assumption of Liabilities,” includes Section 4.02, which provides that:

[I]n addition to any other Liabilities otherwise expressly assumed by [New Singer] ... pursuant to this Agreement ..., [New Singer] hereby agrees ... to assume ... those Liabilities ... of all of the operations and businesses included in the Former Singer Businesses [the Old Singer sewing and furniture businesses being transferred to New Singer, as enumerated in Schedule I of the Agreement].

“Liabilities,” in turn, are defined as “any and all debts, liabilities and obligations (whether past, present or future, fixed, contingent, or otherwise, known or unknown) including, without limitation, those arising under ... any contract, commitment or undertaking.”

Article VIII of the Spin-Off Agreement addresses, among other things, the disposition of certain of Old Singer’s pension plans. Section 8.02, titled “Pension Plans,” discusses six pension plans (referred to herein as the “Enumerated Plans”) that were to be transferred, in whole or in part, to New Singer. Section 8.02(a) provides that three Furniture Division “Hourly Plans” would be transferred to New Singer in their entirety: “[Old] Singer shall cause the transfer to [New Singer] as of [July 18, 1986] of all of [Old] Singer’s rights and interests in [the Hourly Plans],” and “[New Singer] shall assume and be solely responsible for all liabilities and obligations whatsoever of [Old] Singer and its subsidiaries under each of the Hourly Plans.” Pursuant to Section 8.02(b), two other plans would be split between Old and New Singer, and the transferred portions would then be merged with another plan being transferred to form a new pension plan to be administered by New Singer. Section 8.02 also provides that certain actions were required to be taken with respect to the Enumerated Plans — for example, Old Singer was obligated to ensure that the Hourly Plans *67 met the Internal Revenue Code’s minimum funding standards as of the spin-off, and to deliver certain records relating to the Enumerated Plans to New Singer. The EOFS Plan is not mentioned in Section 8.02.

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639 F.3d 63, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 8491, 2011 WL 1548952, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lockheed-martin-corp-v-retail-holdings-nv-ca2-2011.