Nos. 86-3709(l), 87-3018

826 F.2d 280
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedOctober 16, 1987
Docket280
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 826 F.2d 280 (Nos. 86-3709(l), 87-3018) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nos. 86-3709(l), 87-3018, 826 F.2d 280 (4th Cir. 1987).

Opinion

826 F.2d 280

127 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2842, 107 Lab.Cas. P 10,138,
8 Employee Benefits Ca 2576

DISTRICT 29, UNITED MINE WORKERS OF AMERICA; Herschel
Henson, Plaintiff- Appellee,
v.
UNITED MINE WORKERS OF AMERICA 1974 BENEFIT PLAN AND TRUST,
Defendant- Appellant,
The Bituminous Coal Operators' Association, Inc., Amicus Curiae,
and
Manlo Mining Co., a domestic corp., Gopher Mining Co., a
foreign corporation, Defendant.
DISTRICT 29, UNITED MINE WORKERS OF AMERICA; Local Union
5821; Local Union 6046, United Mine Workers of America;
Garland Walkup, Retiree; Madeline R. Thomas, Widow; Joseph
M. Hanshew, Disabled Retiree; John Doe; Mary Doe, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
UNITED MINE WORKERS OF AMERICA 1974 BENEFIT PLAN AND TRUST,
Defendant- Appellant,
and
Royal Coal Company, Defendant,
The Bituminous Coal Operators' Association, Inc., Amicus Curiae.

Nos. 86-3709(L), 87-3018.

United States Court of Appeals,
Fourth Circuit.

Argued June 2, 1987.
Decided Aug. 13, 1987.
Rehearing and Rehearing En Banc Denied Oct. 16, 1987.

William Francis Hanrahan (Arent, Fox, Kintner, Plotkin & Kahn; Gerald E. Cole, Jr., Gen. Counsel, United Mine Workers of America Health & Retirement Funds, Carolyn Mensi Petralia, Senior Associate Counsel, on brief) for defendant-appellant.

Bradley James Pyles (Grant Crandall, Charles F. Donnelly, Crandall & Pyles, Michael H. Holland, Gen. Counsel, Deborah Stern, United Mine Workers of America on brief) for plaintiff-appellee.

(Charles P. O'Connor; Margery Sinder Friedman; Morgan Lewis & Bockius on brief), for amicus curiae Bituminous Coal Operators' Ass'n, Inc.

Before CHAPMAN, Circuit Judge, BRITT, U.S. District Judge for the Eastern District of North Carolina, and MacKENZIE, Senior U.S. District Judge for the Eastern District of Virginia, sitting by designation.

CHAPMAN, Circuit Judge:

The complicated health benefit plan for retirees and their widows existing in the coal industry is again before the court.1 The health benefit plan protecting coal industry workers requires individual employers to provide retirement health benefits, with the "1974 Benefit Plan and Trust," an industry-wide trust fund, to assume liability for these benefits when the worker's individual employer or its successor is no longer in business, as defined under the pertinent bargaining agreement. The difficult question presented in this appeal is, where the former employer remains "in business," as defined in the wage agreement, but is no longer legally liable to provide health benefits, must the 1974 Benefit Plan and Trust assume liability. Based on our reading of the terms of the agreements, and the intentions of the parties made manifest in entering those agreements, we affirm the district court's decision that the 1974 Benefit Plan and Trust must assume liability.

* This appeal is a consolidation of two cases where the 1974 Benefit Plan and Trust refused to provide health benefits to pensioners. In one case,2 the district court after conducting hearings issued a preliminary injunction against the 1974 Benefit Plan to prevent it from refusing to provide health benefits. In the other case,3 the district court permanently enjoined the 1974 Benefit Plan from refusing to provide health and other nonpension benefits.

Prior to 1978, the 1974 Benefit Plan and Trust and its antecedent, created in 1950, were the sole means by which pensioners were provided with health benefits. Each mining company would contribute money, based upon its coal production, to the fund. The Bituminous Coal Operators Association (BCOA), a large group of coal producers, became worried that some of the smaller coal producers were manipulating their corporate structures and using the bankruptcy laws to evade their obligations to contribute to the 1974 Plan. Thus during negotiations for the 1978 wage agreement, the BCOA proposed that the 1974 Benefit Plan and Trust be eliminated, and that individual employers create individual means by which to supply retirement health benefits. The union demurred. The eventual compromise reached was that individual operators would have primary responsibility to provide retirement health benefits through private insurance carriers, but that the 1974 Benefit Plan would continue in existence in order to provide such benefits for "orphaned" workers: workers whose former employer or its corporate successor was no longer in business. The specific language in the collective bargaining agreement which provides that the 1974 Benefit Plan and Trust will be utilized only where a retiree's former employer is no longer in business reads as follows:

The 1974 Benefit Plan and Trust provides health and other non-pension benefits, during the term of this Agreement to any retired miner under the 1974 Pension Plan or any successor plan(s) thereto who would otherwise cease to receive the health and other non-pension benefits provided herein because the signatory Employer (including successors and assigns) for whom such miner last worked in signatory classified employment is no longer in business. Such entitlement shall extend to surviving spouses and other beneficiaries who are eligible for health coverage as a result of their relationship to such a miner whose last signatory classified employment was with a signatory Employer which is no longer in business. For purposes of determining eligibility under the 1974 Benefit Plan and Trust, an Employer is considered to be "no longer in business" only if the Employer:

(a) has ceased all mining operations and has ceased employing persons under this Wage Agreement, with no reasonable expectation that such operations will start up again; and

(b) is financially unable (through the business entity that has ceased operations as described in subparagraph (a) above, including such company's successors or assigns, if any, or any other related division, subsidiary, or a parent corporation, regardless of whether covered by this Wage Agreement or not) to provide health and other non-pension benefits to its retired miners and surviving spouses.

Article XX(c)(3)(ii) of the 1981 and 1984 collective bargaining agreements.

Despite the patent limitation of the liability of the 1974 Benefit Plan and Trust to provide health benefits only "during the terms of this agreement," and only where the individual employer is "no longer in business," the general description to each of the many two-year collective bargaining agreements states that pensioners who retire before the effective date of each collective bargaining agreement are entitled to health benefits "for life" and their widows "until death or remarriage." The plaintiffs in these cases retired between 1976 and 1984, thus prior to the effective date of the 1984 collective bargaining agreement, which agreement contains in its general description the aforementioned language. These retirees' former employers, however, and their corporate successors are not signatories to the relevant wage agreements, and therefore these individual employers and their successors are no longer liable to provide health benefits.

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