Pesca v. Board of Trustees

176 F.R.D. 110, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17218, 1997 WL 690278
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedNovember 3, 1997
DocketNo. 97 Civ. 3541 LAK
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 176 F.R.D. 110 (Pesca v. Board of Trustees) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pesca v. Board of Trustees, 176 F.R.D. 110, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17218, 1997 WL 690278 (S.D.N.Y. 1997).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

KAPLAN, District Judge.

Plaintiff Carmine Pesca was a construction worker disabled as a result of an injury sustained on October 28, 1989. His claim for union disability benefits was denied in 1994 by the defendant (the “Fund”) on the ground that plaintiff did not meet the requirements for coverage. Mr. Pesca then sued the Fund under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act to recover the claimed benefits and other relief, but the Court granted the Fund’s motion for summary judgment dismissing the complaint.1 More than two years later, Pesca brought this action to set aside the judgment in Pesca I on the ground that the prior judgment was procured by fraud and on the basis of additional evidence which, he claims, was newly discovered. The Fund moves for summary judgment dismissing the action.

Facts

Pesca I

The facts concerning Mr. Pesca’s claim and its disposition are set forth in the Court’s opinion in Pesca I, familiarity with which is assumed. To summarize the essential points briefly the relevant Fund benefit plan made eligible for disability benefits only those members with eight years of credited service. According to the records produced in the litigation, Mr. Pesca had only seven years of credited service because he did not work sufficient hours to earn service credit for the year 1982, the first year of his employment.2 Mr. Pesca did not dispute the Fund’s records of the hours credited to him in 1982. He instead sought to overturn the Fund’s decision by contending that (i) the denial of benefits was arbitrary and capricious in view of the fact that he had worked more than the minimum of 4,800 hours over eight years although he had not worked the requisite 600 hours in each of the eight years, (ii) the Fund improperly decided his appeal at a meeting of which Mr. Pesca had no notice, and (iii) Mr. Pesca’s appeal was presented to the Fund trustees by an independent actuarial consultant. Finding no merit in any of these assertions, the Court granted summary judgment in favor of the Fund.

Subsequent Events

More than a year after the decision in Pesca I, the Fund provided Mr. Pesca with [112]*112copies of annuity statements from its archives which set forth his detailed employment history and the employer contributions made on his behalf. These revealed, among other things, that Mr. Pesca had been employed with the George A. Fuller Company (“Fuller”) in November and December 1982.

Mr. Pesca then requested that the Fund reverse its prior ruling denying him benefits because, he contended, the Fund had not credited him with additional hours he claimed that he had worked for Fuller in the summer of 1982. Mr. Pesca asserted that the hours in question were credited to his stepfather’s brother, Frank Cannella, and submitted a statement of a co-worker which claimed that Mr. Pesca had worked at least 600 hours in the summer of 1982 for Fuller.

The Fund responded on September 19, 1996. It declined to reverse its prior determination based on the information provided although it offered to consider evidence of the claimed employment in the form of (i) copies of canceled paychecks, or (ii) relevant Social Security earnings records. It further advised that any such documentation should be submitted in connection with a request for review of the denied claim.

In March 1997, Mr. Pesca’s counsel presented his argument before a regular meeting of the Fund’s board. He maintained that he believed that the Fund had suppressed information — specifically, a list of employers for whom Mr. Pesca had worked — during Pesca I so that Mr. Pesca would not realize that he had not received credit for all of his hours of work in 1982. The Fund’s counsel responded that the trustees could not grant the appeal without some documentation, such as pay stubs or Social Security earnings statements, establishing that Mr. Pesca had worked the claimed hours. He suggested that Mr. Pesca contact the Social Security Administration and provided him with the necessary form for obtaining Social Security records. He further indicated that the trustees would consider Mr. Pesca’s claim yet again when and if appropriate documentation was provided. No such documentation ever was forthcoming however.

The Complaint

Mr. Pesca brought this action to set aside the judgment in Pesca I in May 1997. The theme of the complaint — like his 1997 argument to the Fund — is that Mr. Pesca did not recall at the time of Pesca I that he had worked the requisite number of hours in 1982 for Fuller, that he first was reminded of this fact after Pesca I ended when he received annuity statements from the Fund showing a monthly breakdown of his hours for 1982, which allegedly refreshed his recollection. The complaint asserts that the alleged omission of Mr. Pesca’s 1982 summer employment from the records previously disclosed to him was part of a scheme to credit to Frank Cannella the hours that Mr. Pesca worked.3 It relies upon the annuity statements,4 Mr. Pesca’s alleged belief that time actually worked by him was credited to Frank Cannella,5 and references to litigation in which former union officials and service providers were accused of unrelated unlawful acts.6

The Present Motion

The Fund has moved for summary judgment dismissing the complaint. It argues in substance that the evidence relied upon by Mr. Pesca — his allegedly refreshed recollection of the events of 1982 — was not “newly discovered” within the meaning of Rule 60(b). It contended further that there was no fraud because the number of hours Mr. Pesca worked in 1982 was not in issue in Pesca I and, in any case, because the annuity statements that supposedly refreshed Mr. Pesca’s recollection were disclosed to Mr. Pesca when he requested them, which he failed to do before the prior action was concluded.

Mr. Pesca has responded in a most remarkable fashion. He inveighs against summary judgment as an extreme remedy and protests that he did in fact work the requisite number of hours in 1982.7 But the affidavit then states:

[113]*113“Several years ago, ..., I had learned that instead of my work in the summer months of 1982 having been credited to me, it appeared that the payroll maintained by the Fuller Co. for the months of June, July and August of 1982 listed some other individual’s name and social security number. One of my objectives in the discovery aspect of this lawsuit would be to confirm my allegations concerning the actual name and social security number of the person who was credited with my work for total salary and pension benefits.”8

Thus, while the affidavit later asserts that Mr. Pesca first obtained a breakdown, by employer, of the Fund’s records of the 1982 hours worked,9 Mr. Pesca’s affidavit in opposition to the motion for summary judgment appears to concede that he learned “[sjeveral years ago” that work he had done for Fuller in the summer of 1982 in fact had been credited to someone else. This of course necessarily means that Mr. Pesca knew that the Fund’s records understated the hours he had worked in 1982.

Discussion

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
176 F.R.D. 110, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17218, 1997 WL 690278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pesca-v-board-of-trustees-nysd-1997.