JOHN R. BROWN, Circuit Judge:
The Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, Pub.L.No.93-406, 88 Stat. 829 (ERISA), requires the administrator of a covered pension plan to furnish to any plan “participant” upon written request a statement showing the total benefits accrued and the portion, if any, which have become nonforfeitable (“vested”).
The administrator that fails to comply with such a
request within 30 days may be sued by the participant and subjected to substantial personal liability, in the discretion of the District Court.
The sole issue on this appeal is whether a former employee whose pension benefits were not vested at the time of her termination retains “participant” rights under the Act. We conclude that such a former employee is not a “participant” and therefore cannot recover penalties against the administrator for failure to promptly furnish a statement.
We accordingly affirm the grant of summary judgment in favor of the administrator.
For the purposes of this appeal, the facts may be simply stated.
Marie L. Nugent was a teacher for Jesuit High School of New Orleans for three years. Since Nu-gent was over twenty-five years old, she qualified as a participant in the school’s pension plan during that period. None of her benefits vested, however, since she had not completed five years of service when terminated, as required by the pension plan. A month after her termination, she wrote the school requesting “all specific, detailed information regarding the amount which has been vested in the Pension Fund.” It may be assumed that this request was addressed to the pension plan “administrator” and was adequate in form under ERISA. No reply to this request was received within thirty days.
Nugent then filed two lawsuits against the school. One alleged that her termination was the result of age discrimination, entitling her to reinstatement and the recovery of interim benefits, among other damages. The second was the present lawsuit, seeking disclosure of the requested information, statutory damages, and attorney’s fees. Soon after filing this lawsuit, the school furnished the requested information; by then, some 17 months had passed since the original request.
Nugent’s right to a response concerning her pension plan rights and benefits depends on whether she was still a “participant” after her termination:
The term “participant” means any employee or former employee of an employer, or any member or former member of an employee organization, who is or may become eligible to receive a benefit of any type from an employee benefit plan which covers employees of such employer or members of such organization, or whose beneficiaries may be eligible to receive any such benefit.
29 U.S.C.A. § 1002(7). The meaning of this statutory term is to a degree further indicated by 29 U.S.C.A. § 1052(a)(1)(A), which provides that any employee over 25 years of age and with one year of service must be made eligible for “participation” in the type of pension plan at issue here. ERISA indicates that a participant’s benefits under this type of pension plan must begin to vest after five years of service. 29 U.S.C.A. § 1053.
It is plain that any current employee who meets the minimum participation standards “may become eligible to receive a benefit” even though the employee has not acquired enough tenure for his or her benefits to vest. By remaining on the job, the employee will eventually become vested. Thus that current employee is always a “participant.” The former employee who is terminated after having acquired vested benefits is also a “participant: ” at retirement, the vested benefits are actually paid. The vested former employee therefore “is . eligible to receive a benefit.”
In contrast, the former employee without vested benefits will not receive benefits at retirement unless subsequently rehired by the employer. Nugent argues that the school might choose to rehire her, or be forced to do so if her age discrimination suit is successful. Because of the rehire possibility, Nugent argues that she falls within the statutory language of a “former employee” who “may become eligible to receive a benefit.”
Nugent’s argument has some force because a present employee without vested benefits is nonetheless a “participant: ” the employee’s continued employment will cause the benefits to vest. Similarly, the employer’s decision to rehire a former employee — as compared to retaining a present employee — will cause the employee’s benefits to vest after appropriate continued employment. Nugent therefore presents a good argument that the statutory language can be read literally to make, in effect, all former employees over the age of 25 “participants.”
We are convinced, however, that Congress did not intend such a reading. We believe that the “may become eligible” language was intended to apply only to current employees. In
Golden v. Kentile Floors, Inc.,
512 F.2d 838 (5th Cir. 1975), we confronted a very similar issue under the partially identical pre-ERISA pension law.
Golden left Kentile Floors to work for a competitor. Working for a competitor forfeited his plan benefits. Golden was informed by Kentile Floors that it regarded his new employer as a competitor and that his benefits would be forfeited unless he quit within five days. We held, though without extensive explanation, that Golden was not a “participant.” We cautioned, however, that had the administrators of Golden’s plan not first informed him that his benefits were forfeited, “different considerations” might have been involved. 512 F.2d at 850.
Nugent was not informed by the school of her lack of benefit rights prior to her information request.
Golden
is therefore not controlling. It does, however, suggest that the “may become eligible” language was not intended to apply to all former employees, for otherwise Golden would have been entitled to statutory penalties whether or not he had been first informed of his lack of benefit rights.
The “different considerations” presented in our case today arise under a slightly different legislative framework than in
Golden.
While the pre-ERISA law involved in
Golden
used the same definition of “participant,” it imposed less onerous disclosure requirements on administrators: only generalized information concerning the pension plans needed to be disclosed. But ERISA requires disclosure of each requesting participant’s benefits — a considerably more difficult administrative task requiring an accounting of the participant’s benefits.
Congress recognized the burden of individualized accountings. Thus it limited participants to one requested accounting per year. 29 U.S.C.A. § 1025(b). Congress also required only a single, individualized accounting to be furnished to the Social
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JOHN R. BROWN, Circuit Judge:
The Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, Pub.L.No.93-406, 88 Stat. 829 (ERISA), requires the administrator of a covered pension plan to furnish to any plan “participant” upon written request a statement showing the total benefits accrued and the portion, if any, which have become nonforfeitable (“vested”).
The administrator that fails to comply with such a
request within 30 days may be sued by the participant and subjected to substantial personal liability, in the discretion of the District Court.
The sole issue on this appeal is whether a former employee whose pension benefits were not vested at the time of her termination retains “participant” rights under the Act. We conclude that such a former employee is not a “participant” and therefore cannot recover penalties against the administrator for failure to promptly furnish a statement.
We accordingly affirm the grant of summary judgment in favor of the administrator.
For the purposes of this appeal, the facts may be simply stated.
Marie L. Nugent was a teacher for Jesuit High School of New Orleans for three years. Since Nu-gent was over twenty-five years old, she qualified as a participant in the school’s pension plan during that period. None of her benefits vested, however, since she had not completed five years of service when terminated, as required by the pension plan. A month after her termination, she wrote the school requesting “all specific, detailed information regarding the amount which has been vested in the Pension Fund.” It may be assumed that this request was addressed to the pension plan “administrator” and was adequate in form under ERISA. No reply to this request was received within thirty days.
Nugent then filed two lawsuits against the school. One alleged that her termination was the result of age discrimination, entitling her to reinstatement and the recovery of interim benefits, among other damages. The second was the present lawsuit, seeking disclosure of the requested information, statutory damages, and attorney’s fees. Soon after filing this lawsuit, the school furnished the requested information; by then, some 17 months had passed since the original request.
Nugent’s right to a response concerning her pension plan rights and benefits depends on whether she was still a “participant” after her termination:
The term “participant” means any employee or former employee of an employer, or any member or former member of an employee organization, who is or may become eligible to receive a benefit of any type from an employee benefit plan which covers employees of such employer or members of such organization, or whose beneficiaries may be eligible to receive any such benefit.
29 U.S.C.A. § 1002(7). The meaning of this statutory term is to a degree further indicated by 29 U.S.C.A. § 1052(a)(1)(A), which provides that any employee over 25 years of age and with one year of service must be made eligible for “participation” in the type of pension plan at issue here. ERISA indicates that a participant’s benefits under this type of pension plan must begin to vest after five years of service. 29 U.S.C.A. § 1053.
It is plain that any current employee who meets the minimum participation standards “may become eligible to receive a benefit” even though the employee has not acquired enough tenure for his or her benefits to vest. By remaining on the job, the employee will eventually become vested. Thus that current employee is always a “participant.” The former employee who is terminated after having acquired vested benefits is also a “participant: ” at retirement, the vested benefits are actually paid. The vested former employee therefore “is . eligible to receive a benefit.”
In contrast, the former employee without vested benefits will not receive benefits at retirement unless subsequently rehired by the employer. Nugent argues that the school might choose to rehire her, or be forced to do so if her age discrimination suit is successful. Because of the rehire possibility, Nugent argues that she falls within the statutory language of a “former employee” who “may become eligible to receive a benefit.”
Nugent’s argument has some force because a present employee without vested benefits is nonetheless a “participant: ” the employee’s continued employment will cause the benefits to vest. Similarly, the employer’s decision to rehire a former employee — as compared to retaining a present employee — will cause the employee’s benefits to vest after appropriate continued employment. Nugent therefore presents a good argument that the statutory language can be read literally to make, in effect, all former employees over the age of 25 “participants.”
We are convinced, however, that Congress did not intend such a reading. We believe that the “may become eligible” language was intended to apply only to current employees. In
Golden v. Kentile Floors, Inc.,
512 F.2d 838 (5th Cir. 1975), we confronted a very similar issue under the partially identical pre-ERISA pension law.
Golden left Kentile Floors to work for a competitor. Working for a competitor forfeited his plan benefits. Golden was informed by Kentile Floors that it regarded his new employer as a competitor and that his benefits would be forfeited unless he quit within five days. We held, though without extensive explanation, that Golden was not a “participant.” We cautioned, however, that had the administrators of Golden’s plan not first informed him that his benefits were forfeited, “different considerations” might have been involved. 512 F.2d at 850.
Nugent was not informed by the school of her lack of benefit rights prior to her information request.
Golden
is therefore not controlling. It does, however, suggest that the “may become eligible” language was not intended to apply to all former employees, for otherwise Golden would have been entitled to statutory penalties whether or not he had been first informed of his lack of benefit rights.
The “different considerations” presented in our case today arise under a slightly different legislative framework than in
Golden.
While the pre-ERISA law involved in
Golden
used the same definition of “participant,” it imposed less onerous disclosure requirements on administrators: only generalized information concerning the pension plans needed to be disclosed. But ERISA requires disclosure of each requesting participant’s benefits — a considerably more difficult administrative task requiring an accounting of the participant’s benefits.
Congress recognized the burden of individualized accountings. Thus it limited participants to one requested accounting per year. 29 U.S.C.A. § 1025(b). Congress also required only a single, individualized accounting to be furnished to the Social
Security Administration and to the employee when the employee terminated his service. 29 U.S.C.A. § 1029(a)(1)(B).
But Congress made clear that it intended to limit that requirement to former employees with vested, not nonvested benefits (emphasis supplied):
A copy of the statement of the deferred
vested
benefits in the plan for individuals who have terminated employment during a plan year which is furnished to the Social Security Administration also is to be furnished to the individ- ■ ual participant.
H.R.Conf.Rep.No. 93-1280, 93d Cong., 2d Sess.,
reprinted in
[1974-3] U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News, pp. 5038, 5042. This statement reflects the assumption that nonvest-ed former employees are not “participants.”
Plan administrators have to maintain records of vested former employees since benefits must eventually be paid to those individuals or their beneficiaries. Similarly, administrators would in any event keep records of current, though nonvested, employees who are, at least constructively, active contributors to the pension plan. But had Congress required, because at some future date an accounting may be requested, the maintenance of records for nonvested former employees, a considerable additional burden would have been imposed.
We do not believe that Congress intended such an additional burden.
We therefore extend Golden’s view of the definition of participant to exclude a former, nonvested employee even though the employee received no prior notice of his or her nonvested status. We do not, however, hold that an employee who is given a reasonable indication during employment that his or her benefits have vested may thereafter be terminated and denied an accounting because of an ostensible reevaluation of the vesting determination by the
plan administrator. Some situations may yet find the absence of prior notice to a former employee of significance for purposes of disclosing individual benefits. But we find nothing compelling an exception here. Accordingly, the grant of summary judgment was proper.
AFFIRMED.