Pender v. Bank of America Corp.

269 F.R.D. 589, 49 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 2165, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 94788, 2010 WL 3370056
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. North Carolina
DecidedAugust 25, 2010
DocketNo. 3:05-CV-238-MU
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 269 F.R.D. 589 (Pender v. Bank of America Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pender v. Bank of America Corp., 269 F.R.D. 589, 49 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 2165, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 94788, 2010 WL 3370056 (W.D.N.C. 2010).

Opinion

ORDER

GRAHAM C. MULLEN, District Judge.

THIS MATTER is before the Court on Plaintiffs’ Motion to Certify Class and for Appointment of Class Counsel. For reasons giving below, the Motion is GRANTED.

[593]*593I. BACKGROUND

This action arises from the organization and administration of the Bank of America Pension Plan (“the BAC Plan” or “the Plan”), and transactions between the BAC Plan and the Bank of America 401(k) Plan (“the 401(k) Plan”). Plaintiffs’ fundamental allegation is that Bank of America (BoA) has wrongfully deprived Plaintiffs of benefits under the Plans.

a. Retirement Plans in General

This ease deals with some of the most complicated aspects of employee pension plans, which warrants a brief overview of how these plans function. The plans at issue in this case are (1) the BAC Plan, which is a type of defined benefit plan called a cash balance plan; and (2) the 401(k) Plan, which is a defined contribution plan. ERISA covers both defined benefit plans and defined contribution plans. Defined benefit plans promise that upon retirement a specific monthly benefit will be provided based on a plan formula. These plans generally do not allow for an increase in participant benefits beyond the amount guaranteed under the formula. Defined contribution plans, on the other hand, do not guarantee a specific amount upon retirement. Instead employees are given individual accounts to which both the employer and employee can contribute. Under this type of plan, an employee’s retirement benefit is the account balance upon retirement. A 401(k) plan is a defined contribution plan.

Under the 401(k) system, an employee has an individual account to which the employer and the participant can contribute a defined amount. In most plans, each participant can then invest his individual account in whichever investment options are provided under the plan. The participant typically bears all the investment risk: if the participant invests poorly, the full account balance can be lost. Although a 401(k) carries this risk, each individual account holder is afforded an important protection: the money in a participant’s 401(k) account is his own money, and, unlike a defined benefit “account,” cannot be squandered through the actions of the plan administrators.

A cash balance plan is a species of defined benefit plan, and is often referred to as a hybrid plan because it has aspects of defined-benefit and defined contribution plans. Like a defined-eontribution plan, a participant has an individual account to which the employer contributes funds. The participant earns interest on that account, or in some cases, the participant can invest the funds in a limited number of financial instruments. But there is a key difference: the participant’s account is virtual. In reality, the employer pools the contributed money and invests that pool as it sees fit, while crediting the accounts based on the participants hypothetical investment choices or some pre-set interest formula. As noted above, because a participant’s account is virtual, there is no separate account protection. On the other hand, the employer shelters any investments risk; thus, no matter the poverty of the participant’s hypothetical investment choices, the participant’s account balance can never drop below the base contributions made by the employer. A cash balance plan must comply with ERISA’s standards for defined benefit plans. Upon retirement, the benefit is usually provided as a lump-sum distribution or an annuity.

b. The BoA Retirement Plans

The BAC Plan is a successor in interest to the NationsBank Pension Plan and the Bank-America Pension Cash Balance Plan, which merged in 1998. The BAC Plan is a cash balance plan that was originally formulated in 1998 by NationsBank, under the guidance of Defendant PwC. The BAC Plan, and its predecessors, were or are “employee pension benefit[s],” “employee benefit plan[s],” and “defined benefit plan[s],” under ERISA §§ 3(2)(A), 3(3), and 3(35) (29 U.S.C. §§ 1002(2)(A), 1002(3), 1002(35)). For the sake of convenience, the separate plans will generally be described as “the Plan” or the “BAC Plan.”

Under the BAC Plan, a participant is given a virtual account, which is credited monthly with compensation and investment credits. The compensation credits are based on a percentage of the employee’s salary, and the investment credits are based on a limited number of investment options, which are [594]*594identical to the options available under the Bank’s 401(k) plan. Like all cash balance plans, the account balance can never be less than the sum of the opening balance and all compensation credits. The accounts are not however protected from inflation, which means the actual value of the accounts can decrease.

In addition to the BAC Plan, both Nations-Bank and Bank of America have or had 401(k) Plans. For convenience, these 401(k) plans with be referred to as “the 401(k) Plan(s)” or “the 401(k).” Participants in these 401 (k)s were given the option of transferring their accounts to the NationsBank Cash Balance Plan and the Bank of America Pension Plan; thousands of participants elected to do so. On July 1,1998, $1.4 billion was transferred from the NationsBank 401(k) Plan to the NationsBank Cash Balance Plan; and on August 4, 2000, $1.3 billion was transferred from the Bank of America 401(k) Plan to the Bank of America Pension Plan. Both the Plaintiffs and the IRS claim that these transfers violated ERISA.

c. Named Plaintiffs

The named plaintiffs in this action are Mr. William L. Pender and Mr. David McCorkle. Mr. Pender is a current BoA employee who has worked for the company for 35 years and is an active participant in both the BAC Plan and the 401(k) Plan. Mr. Pender was 69 years old when this Motion was filed. Mr. McCorkle is a former Nations Bank employee who was an active participant in the BAC and 401(k) Plans. He received a lump-sum distribution when he left BoA. Mr. McCorkle was 55 when this motion was filed.

d. Plaintiffs’ Causes of Action

The Third Amended Complaint contains seventeen pages of extensive factual allegations and then asserts four counts as the basis for relief.

1. Count Unlawful Lump Sum Benefit Calculation

Count I challenges the Plan’s definition of “normal retirement date,”1 and the Plan’s subsequent avoidance of the “whipsaw effect” when calculating a participant’s lump-sum benefit. Under ERISA, a vested plan participant “has a nonforfeitable right to 100 percent of the employee’s accrued benefit derived from employer contributions.” ERISA § 203(a)(2) (29 U.S.C. § 1053(a)(2), 26 U.S.C. § 411(a)(2)). If a defined benefit plan participant seeks his accrued benefit before reaching normal retirement age, the participant can receive a lump-sum payment that is calculated by “projecting the participant’s hypothetical account balance to normal retirement age using the plan’s interest or investment crediting rate, then converting the projected account balance to a life annuity using reasonable actuarial factors expressed under the terms of the plan,” and finally, discounting the value of the annuity back to the time when the lump-sum payment is received. (3d Am. Comp., Doc.

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Bluebook (online)
269 F.R.D. 589, 49 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 2165, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 94788, 2010 WL 3370056, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pender-v-bank-of-america-corp-ncwd-2010.