Narda, Inc. v. Rhode Island Hospital Trust National Bank

744 F. Supp. 685, 12 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 2551, 1990 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10271, 1990 WL 115456
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedAugust 3, 1990
DocketCiv. PN-88-783
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 744 F. Supp. 685 (Narda, Inc. v. Rhode Island Hospital Trust National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Narda, Inc. v. Rhode Island Hospital Trust National Bank, 744 F. Supp. 685, 12 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 2551, 1990 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10271, 1990 WL 115456 (D. Md. 1990).

Opinion

NIEMEYER, District Judge.

OPINION AND ORDER

An employee benefit plan established by NARDA, Inc. (the National Appliance and Radio-TV Dealer’s Association) (“NAR-DA”) to provide its members with medical benefits, life insurance, and related benefits became insolvent in May 1986 because the value of claims of participants for medical benefits exceeded the premiums collected. By September 1987 NARDA had accumulated more than $2 million in unpaid claims, and on October 31, 1987, it terminated altogether the benefits which it had been providing to members. This action, which is brought under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (“ERISA”), 29 U.S.C. §§ 1001, et seq., (1982), alleges that the defendants, who were retained by NARDA to provide services to the plan, mismanaged the funds and breached fiduciary duties imposed on them by ERISA.

Motions to dismiss and for summary judgment filed by various defendants present the following issues, some of which are unsettled, relating to defendants’ responsibilities under ERISA:

1. When fiduciaries extend benefits under an employee benefit plan to persons not defined as beneficiaries, does the plan lose its status as an ERISA-regulated plan thereby depriving the Court of subject matter jurisdiction?
2. In the circumstances of their relationship to the plan, are several of the defendants fiduciaries who owe a duty to the plaintiffs?
3. Does ERISA provide for indemnification or contribution among culpable fiduciaries?
*687 4. Are transactions in which NARDA retained fees for placing insurance on behalf of the plan and advanced monies to pay claims against the plan prohibited by ERISA?

I.

BACKGROUND

NARDA, which is an Illinois corporation, is a trade association of retail electrical appliance dealers. Since the 1950’s it has provided its members with group benefits for their employees by obtaining for them group insurance for medical benefits, disability, and death. The management and administration of the benefits plan had been under the direction of Steven H. Gamp and a corporation that he controlled, SHG Associates, Inc. (“SHG”), since the late 1960’s. In May 1982 Gamp concluded that the premiums paid for medical benefits could be reduced if those particular benefits became “self-insured” and were no longer underwritten by an insurance company. NARDA agreed to the self-insured medical plan, and in May 1982 NARDA offered its self-funded medical benefits plan to its members. The Court has not been presented with any trust instrument that establishes that plan, although members of NARDA and participants in the plan received a summary plan description.

Almost a year later Gamp engaged Rhode Island Hospital Trust National Bank (“the Rhode Island Bank”), which provided ERISA plan services, to establish a trust to receive from plan participants payments for premiums for obtaining insurance policies as requested, including life insurance, accidental death and dismemberment insurance, and/or group health insurance. On April 14, 1983, Gamp caused NARDA to establish a formal trust (“the NARDA Trust”) with the Rhode Island Bank as its trustee. He also caused NARDA to consent to having the Rhode Island Bank, as trustee, to enter into an administration agreement with SHG, who was to act as a liaison between NARDA and the Rhode Island Bank. Although the Rhode Island Bank contends that its charge was limited to receiving premiums and obtaining insur-anee as provided in the NARDA Trust, NARDA claims that the NARDA Trust also assumed responsibility for the preexisting plan by which NARDA provided medical benefits on a self-insured basis.

On August 1, 1985, over two years after the NARDA Trust was established, Gamp and SHG entered into an “Administrative Services Agreement” with Roger Slotkin and the entity he controlled, the NBA Group, Inc. (“NBA”), to form a new corporation named SHG Insurance Brokers, Inc. (“SHG Brokers”), to which they assigned all responsibility for administration of the NARDA account. Under the terms of the Administrative Services Agreement, SHG Brokers was to use the services of NBA to assist SHG Brokers in the administration of the NARDA Trust and the medical benefits plan. SHG Brokers was also used as a conduit through which Slotkin would gradually acquire Gamp’s business.

The NARDA Trust initially obtained group life insurance from the United States Life Insurance Company, but later it switched companies and obtained the insurance from the Hartford Life Insurance Company (“the Hartford”). SHG Brokers negotiated the contract with the Hartford to provide life insurance for the NARDA Trust and also insurance against excessive losses and premiums for the self-funded medical benefits plan.

By May 1986 NARDA was unable to pay medical benefits from the cash that it had and was collecting from members as premiums. By September 1987 NARDA had accumulated more than $2 million in unpaid medical claims, and one month later, on October 31, 1987, NARDA announced the termination of all benefits. At the same time it notified the participating members that a “work-out plan” would be developed to resolve existing claims and a new fully insured plan was made available to participants. During the work-out period, NAR-DA advanced approximately $500,000 to an escrow fund for purposes of settling existing claims at less than 100% of their value.

NARDA, acting on behalf of its members and participants, and two individual benefi *688 ciaries, Georgia La Mendola and Mark Stel-ter, filed this action on March 17, 1988, naming as defendants most of the persons and entities who organized or provided services to NARDA, the plans, and the NAR-DA Trust. On September 2, 1988, Judge Alexander Harvey, II dismissed various counts of the complaint, and an amended complaint was filed on August 1, 1989, relying solely on ERISA for jurisdiction. The amended complaint names as defendants the Rhode Island Bank, SHG, Gamp, Slotkin, NBA, and the Hartford. All of the defendants have filed motions to dismiss or for summary judgment, which have been amply briefed. Following oral argument on October 20, 1989, additional submissions were received and have been considered.

For the reasons that are given hereafter, the motion of the Rhode Island Bank to be dismissed will be granted; the motions that challenge the right under ERISA to make claims for indemnification or contribution among fiduciaries will be granted; and all other motions to dismiss or for summary judgment will be denied.

II.

JURISDICTION

Slotkin and NBA filed a motion to dismiss this action on the ground that the NARDA Trust is not an “employee welfare benefit plan” as defined by ERISA and that the Court therefore lacks subject matter jurisdiction. They contend that the NARDA Trust was not “established or maintained by an employer ... or an employee organization” because benefits were extended to anyone engaged in retailing or servicing consumer products and equipment, regardless of whether they were employers or whether they belonged to NAR-DA.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
744 F. Supp. 685, 12 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 2551, 1990 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10271, 1990 WL 115456, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/narda-inc-v-rhode-island-hospital-trust-national-bank-mdd-1990.