Lucien G. Senese, Cross-Appellee v. Chicago Area I. B. Of T. Pension Fund

237 F.3d 819, 25 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 1721, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 565, 2001 WL 33052
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 16, 2001
Docket99-3666, 00-1211
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 237 F.3d 819 (Lucien G. Senese, Cross-Appellee v. Chicago Area I. B. Of T. Pension Fund) 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
Lucien G. Senese, Cross-Appellee v. Chicago Area I. B. Of T. Pension Fund, 237 F.3d 819, 25 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 1721, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 565, 2001 WL 33052 (7th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, Circuit Judge.

After a car bombing left him disabled, Lucien G. Senese sought disability retirement benefits from the Chicago Area I.B. of T. Pension Fund (“the Fund”). The Fund awarded him some, but not all, of the benefits that Senese claims are due, so he sued the Fund under Section 502(a)(1)(B) of ERISA. Senese now appeals the district court’s decision granting judgment to the Fund on his claim for benefits, which we affirm. The Fund appeals the court’s decision denying its motion for Rule 11 sanctions and for attorneys’ fees under the fee shifting provision of ERISA, which we affirm in part and reverse in part.

I

Senese’s injuries occurred in 1990, while he was employed as secretary-treasurer of Teamsters Local 703 (“the Local”) and as the Fund’s plan manager and trustee. Despite his injuries, he continued on the payroll of the Local and the Fund until December 31, 1991. According to Senese, he then began the application process for his disability pension in March 1992 with the first of many written requests to the Fund for a pension application form, requests that Senese says were ignored.

In the meantime, in order to maintain his health and pension benefits, Senese secured part-time employment with the Austin J. Merkel Company, working eight hours a month from June 1992 through February 1993. The Fund trustees initially determined that the Merkel job did not qualify as covered employment under the collective bargaining agreement, and returned the contributions that Merkel had made on Senese’s behalf. But after Se-nese presented evidence that his job with Merkel qualified as covered employment, *822 the Fund reversed its position and accepted Merkel’s contributions.

Senese eventually received a pension application from the Fund in May 1993, which Senese claims he promptly completed and returned to the Fund. However, the Fund says it had no record of receiving Senese’s application until sixteen months later — September 1994 — and awarded him benefits beginning the following month. Senese requested a review of this decision, insisting that he was entitled to benefits beginning January 1992, the month after he left his job with the Local. Senese also asserted that, because the Fund delayed sending him an application, his application date should be considered to be March 1992, when he first requested the form.

After conducting a review, the Fund trustees determined that Senese did not actually retire for purposes of his pension until the Merkel job ended in February 1993. However, because Senese could have submitted a completed application form in May 1993 (when the Fund first sent him the form), the trustees adjusted his effective date from October 1994 to June 1993 and awarded him benefits for an additional sixteen months.

Not satisfied with this adjustment, Se-nese filed suit, claiming an improper denial of benefits under § 502(a)(1)(B) of ERISA, 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B). In his Second Amended Complaint, Senese claimed that he was owed retirement benefits and interest for the five months in 1992 after he retired from the Local and before he began the Merkel job (January through May of 1992). He also claimed interest on the additional sixteen' months of benefits that the Fund awarded him after it adjusted his application date to May 1993.

The Fund responded with a draft Rule 11 motion for sanctions, asserting that the Second Amended Complaint was unsupported by the facts or a reasonable investigation of the facts and law, in part because Senese’s 1992 employment with Merkel precluded his claim for earlier benefits. Senese declined to withdraw the complaint, but after discovery, and two weeks before trial, Senese abandoned any claim for benefits before his retirement from Merkel. Instead, in his proposed pretrial order, he claimed benefits for March, April, and May 1993 — the period between the time that he left the Merkel job and the adjusted eligibility date determined by the trustees. This claim was based on his theory that his delayed application should not foreclose earlier benefits because his 1992 letters requesting application forms should have been counted for determining his application date, or alternately, that when an application is delayed, both the plan and the summary plan description provide automatic retroactive benefits.

At trial, however, Senese added a twist to his theory about retroactive benefits, arguing for the first time that there was a direct conflict between the plan and summary plan descriptions on this issue. According to Senese, when an application is delayed, the summary plan description provides for automatic retroactive benefits. And although the underlying plan document had been amended years earlier to add a “good cause” requirement for the payment of retroactive benefits, the summary plan description was not updated to reflect that amendment. Thus, Senese argued that because of this direct conflict, the summary controlled, and he was entitled to retroactive benefits for March, April, and May 1993 without any showing of good cause for his delay in submitting an application.

At the close of Senese’s evidence, the Fund moved for judgment as a matter of law, which the district court granted. The court held that the trustees were not arbitrary or capricious in determining that, because Senese did not actually file an application until May 1993, he was eligible for benefits no earlier than June 1993. As to Senese’s claim that the summary plan provision overrode the pension plan provision on the issue of retroactive benefits, the court held that this theory was not *823 properly before the court because it was not raised in any pleadings or approved pretrial order before the court, and because it had not been raised before the Fund trustees. The court also held that, even had the issue properly been before it, it would not have found a direct conflict between the plan and summary plan descriptions. Finally, the court held that, because the plan did not provide for interest, Senese was not entitled to interest on the sixteen additional months of benefits that were paid after the Fund adjusted his application date. The court then denied the Fund’s motions for sanctions against Senese and his attorney under Rule 11 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and for attorneys’ fees and costs under the fee shifting provision of ERISA, 29 U.S.C. § 1132(g)(1). Both parties appealed.

II

A. Senese’s appeal

Senese’s principal argument on appeal is that the district court erred in determining that there was no conflict between the plan and summary plan descriptions regarding a beneficiary’s entitlement to retroactive benefits when an application is delayed. Senese also asserts that his failure to present this theory to the Fund trustees is not fatal because, he argues, ERISA requires only claim exhaustion, not issue exhaustion.

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Bluebook (online)
237 F.3d 819, 25 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 1721, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 565, 2001 WL 33052, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lucien-g-senese-cross-appellee-v-chicago-area-i-b-of-t-pension-fund-ca7-2001.