Phillips v. Teamsters Local 639 Employers Health & Pension Trust

79 F. Supp. 2d 847, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 116, 2000 WL 12870
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedJanuary 4, 2000
Docket5:99-cv-00522
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 79 F. Supp. 2d 847 (Phillips v. Teamsters Local 639 Employers Health & Pension Trust) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phillips v. Teamsters Local 639 Employers Health & Pension Trust, 79 F. Supp. 2d 847, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 116, 2000 WL 12870 (N.D. Ohio 2000).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF LAW

GWIN, District Judge.

Plaintiff James E. Phillips brings this action under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (“ERISA”), 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B). 1 With this action, *848 Plaintiff Phillips says he is entitled to receive additional pension payments from Defendant Teamsters Local 639-Employee Pension Trust (“Local 639 Fund”).

Specifically, Phillips argues that the Local 639 Fund must pay him a prorated share of his full monthly pension benefit. Phillips worked for United Parcel Service Co. (“UPS”) for 32.5 years. An employee retiring with 32 years of service under the Local 639 Fund is entitled to receive a pension benefit of $3,200 per month. However, Phillips spent only 2.50 years, or 7.69% of his total work time, working for a division of UPS that contributed to the Local 639 Fund. Thus, Phillips seeks $246.08 per month in pension benefits from the Local 639 Fund, an amount reflecting 7.69% of his full monthly pension benefit.

In response, Defendant Local 639 Fund says that it must only pay Phillips an amount based on his contributions to the Fund. The Local 639 Fund says it altered its pension plan in such a manner to change the calculation of partial pension benefits. While such benefits were formerly calculated based on an employee’s total service time, benefits are now based, in part, on the total amount of contributions an employee made to the Fund. Under the Local 639 Fund’s calculation, Phillips is entitled to receive $9.90 per month.

After reviewing the parties’ proposed finding of fact and conclusions of law, the Court finds that Phillips is entitled to a partial pension from the Local 639 Fund of $246.08.

I. Background

A. Phillips’s Employment History

Plaintiff Phillips is an Ohio resident who, before retirement, had worked for UPS for more than thirty years. Initially, Phillips worked for UPS in the Washington, D.C. area. Teamsters Local Union No. 639 represented UPS workers in the Washington, D.C. area. 2 The contract between UPS and Local 639 required the former to make pension contributions to the Defendant Local 639 Fund.

Phillips worked for UPS in the Washington, D.C. area between November 1964 and September 1967. During this time, UPS made contributions to Defendant Local 639 Fund on behalf of Phillips, giving him 2.50 years of contributory service with the Local 639 Fund.

After September 1967, Phillips left the Washington, D.C. area and moved to Youngstown, Ohio. While in Youngstown, Phillips continued working for UPS. Teamsters Local Union No. 377 (“Local 377”) represented Phillips during his tenure with UPS in Youngstown. Local 377 and UPS have been signatories to a series of collective bargaining agreements that required UPS to make pension contributions to the Central States, Southeast and Southwest Areas Pension Fund (“Central States Fund”).

Phillips worked for UPS in the Youngstown area from November 1967 to December 1997. Phillips thus earned 30 years of contributory service credit with the Central States Fund.

At the time of his retirement, Phillips had participated in two pension funds, both the Local 639 Fund and the Central States Fund. Both funds are jointly-trusteed, multi-employer pension funds that receive contributions from employers who have *849 collective bargaining agreements with the Teamsters. ERISA regulates both funds.

B. Reciprocal Agreement

Because union members frequently shifted between employers, and thus pension funds, the Teamsters sought to insure such union member shifts would not prevent members from receiving full pension benefits. To do this, the Teamsters International Union drafted a “Reciprocal Agreement” for Teamsters’s pension funds in the early 1960’s. 3 The Reciprocal Agreement protects employees who have contributed to two or more pension funds. It allows qualified employees to receive a partial pension from the funds to which they contributed. The Central States Fund agreed to the Reciprocal Agreement effective January 1, 1965. The Local 639 Fund agreed to the Reciprocal Agreement on or about September 16,1971.

Signatories to the Reciprocal Agreement agreed to adopt the partial pension policy attached as an exhibit to the Agreement. This policy, adopted nearly verbatim by both the Local 639 Fund and the Central States Fund, sets forth employee eligibility requirements and the formula for calculating partial pension benefits. As to the latter, the policy required that pension benefits be determined by reference to an employee’s total contributory service time, providing in pertinent part:

Section 8. Partial Pension Amount— The amount of the Partial Pension shall be determined as follows:
(a) The amount of the pension to which the employee would be entitled under this Plan taking into account his Combined Service Credit shall be determined, then
(b) The amount of service credit earned with this Plan since January 1, 1955, shall be divided by the total amount of Combined Service Credit earned by the employee since January 1,1955, then
(c)The fraction so determined in (b) shall be multiplied by the pension amount determined in (a) and the result shall be the Partial Pension amount payable by this Plan.

The Reciprocal Agreement further limited the signatories’ right to modify the partial pension policy, providing in pertinent part:

[N]o change shall be made in the provisions of the Article attached as Exhibit A [partial pension policy], either by change of language or by any modification of the Pension Plan which would have the effect of changing the provisions of Exhibit A. It is further agreed that the only way a signatory Pension Fund can terminate the operation of the provisions of Exhibit A is to follow the “termination” provisions of this Reciprocal Agreement set forth in Section 7 hereof.

Under Section 7, the trustees can only cancel the Fund’s participation in the Reciprocal Agreement by giving at least ninety days written notice to the Teamsters International Union’s president and the director of the Industrial Relations Department of the American Trucking Association. A majority of the Union and Employer Trustees of the trust fund must sign this notice of termination. Local 639 Fund has never cancelled its participation in the Reciprocal Agreement as provided in Section 7.

Although the Local 639 Fund had agreed not to make any modification to its partial pension policy unless it followed the specific procedures set forth in the Agreement, it nonetheless unilaterally changed its partial pension policy in October 1985. Under the amended policy, the amount of *850

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79 F. Supp. 2d 847, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 116, 2000 WL 12870, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-teamsters-local-639-employers-health-pension-trust-ohnd-2000.