1 2 3 4 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 5 NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 6 7 RESILIENT FLOOR COVERING Case No. 22-cv-04649-HSG PENSION FUND, et al., 8 FINDINGS OF FACT AND Plaintiffs, CONCLUSIONS OF LAW 9 v. 10 TD SPORTS GROUP, LLC, 11 Defendant. 12 13 Plaintiffs Resilient Floor Covering Pension Fund and Board of Trustees of the Resilient 14 Floor Covering Pension Fund (collectively “Plaintiffs”) brought this action on behalf of 15 themselves and plan participants and beneficiaries against Defendant TD Sports Group, LLC (“TD 16 Sports”) under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, 29 U.S.C. § 1001 et. seq 17 (“ERISA”). See Dkt. No. 1 (“Compl.”) ¶ 1. Plaintiffs’ complaint seeks to collect the withdrawal 18 liability that the pension fund assessed against Field Turf Construction, Inc. (“FTC”), arguing that 19 Defendant is the successor of FTC and therefore jointly and severally liable for the withdrawal 20 liability assessed against FTC. See id. at ¶¶ 30–41. 21 The matter was tried to the Court, sitting without a jury, in January 2024. On February 26, 22 2024, the parties filed proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law. See Dkt. Nos. 89, 90. 23 The Court heard closing arguments on March 15, 2024. See Dkt. No. 91. The Court has carefully 24 considered the evidence presented at trial, the exhibits admitted into evidence, the parties’ 25 proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law, and the arguments of counsel. The following 26 constitutes the Court’s Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 52(a). 27 // 1 I. INTRODUCTION AND LEGAL STANDARD 2 The question before the Court is whether TD Sports is liable to Plaintiffs for the 3 withdrawal liability of FTC based on a theory of successor liability. The Ninth Circuit instructs 4 that “the primary question in labor and employment successorship cases is whether, under the 5 totality of the circumstances, there is substantial continuity between the old and new enterprise.” 6 Resilient Floor Covering Pension Trust Fund Board of Trustees vs. Michael’s Floor Covering, 7 Inc., 801 F.3d 1079, 1090 (9th Cir. 2018) (“Michael’s Floor Covering”) (cleaned up). A court 8 assessing whether the new business is the successor of an old business considers the following 9 factors, which are not exhaustive: 10 Whether there has been a substantial continuity of the same business 11 operations; whether the new employer uses the same plant; whether the same or substantially the same work force is employed; whether 12 the same jobs exist under the same working conditions; whether the same supervisors are employed; whether the same machinery, 13 equipment, and methods of production are used; and whether the same product is manufactured or the same service is offered. 14 15 Id. at 1090-91 (cleaned up). 16 In this context, the Ninth Circuit has held that whether the “successor deliberately takes 17 over ‘basically the same body of customers’” “is of special significance when determining 18 successorship for purposes of withdrawal liability under the MPPAA construction industry 19 exception.” Id. at 1095. This is because under that exception, “an employer’s complete 20 withdrawal and cessation of work usually does not harm the plan because other contributing 21 employers will pick up the construction jobs (i.e. the customers) that would have gone to the 22 withdrawing company.” Id. But “if, instead, an employer uses its insider knowledge to draw a 23 great many of the predecessor’s customers, and so can pick up where the predecessor left off, 24 doing the same type of work as the predecessor, yet neither contributes to the pension plan nor 25 pays withdrawal liability, the assumption that animates the construction industry exception 26 collapses.” Id. at 1095-96 (cleaned up). For this reason, “focusing the successorship inquiry on 27 business retention through exploitation of the predecessor’s contacts, public presentation, and 1 Id. “Certain discrete factors, including whether the new employer uses the same plant and 2 whether the same product is manufactured or the same service is offered are pertinent to 3 determining whether the successor has in fact actively and successfully captured its predecessor’s 4 market share.” Id. (cleaned up). 5 As the party seeking to impose successor liability, Plaintiffs bear the burden of proving by 6 a preponderance of the evidence that TD Sports is liable as FTC’s successor. See Heavenly Hana 7 LLC v. Hotel Union, 14-CV-03743-JCS, 2016 WL 524327, at *9 (N.D. Cal. February 10, 2016), 8 rev’d on other grounds, 891 F.3d 839 (9th Cir. 2018). 9 Based on the record presented at trial, the Court finds that Plaintiffs have met their burden 10 of showing by a preponderance of the evidence that TD Sports is liable as the successor to FTC, 11 such that Plaintiffs are entitled to judgment in their favor. The factual and legal basis for this 12 conclusion is set out below. 13 II. FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW1 14 A. Background Facts 15 Field Turf Construction, Inc. (“FTC”) was incorporated by Darrell and David Brown on or 16 about September 16, 2005, under the name Grass Valley Turf Construction, Inc. Dkt. No. 54 17 (“Undisputed Facts”) at § 3.h. On February 13, 2012, the Browns amended the name of the 18 corporation to Field Turf Construction, Inc. Id. at § 3.i. 19 FTC (the alleged predecessor company) entered into collective bargaining agreements in 20 October 2011 and September 2015 with District Council 16 of the International Union of Painters 21 and Allied Trades (“Union”). TX 203 (2011 CBA); TX 206 (2015 CBA). On the same day as it 22 entered into the 2011 CBA, FTC also signed two additional documents, one called a “Sacramento 23 Area Addendum,” and one called a “Synthetic Grass Addendum” that covered “only the 24 preparation, installation and the maintenance of synthetic grass.” TX 205, 204. The 2015 CBA 25 was again accompanied by a “Sacramento Area Addendum” signed on the same date, but did not 26
27 1 To the extent that any findings of fact are included in the Conclusions of Law section, they shall 1 include any “Synthetic Grass Addendum.” TX 206, 207 (“Sacramento Area Addendum”).2 2 FTC contributed to the Resilient Floor Covering Pension Fund (the “Pension Fund”) on 3 behalf of its employees who performed work covered under the CBA. Undisputed Facts at § 3.b. 4 In December 2015, FTC decided to go out of business and filed a Certificate of Dissolution 5 with the State of California on January 4, 2016. TX 216. 6 TD Sports (the alleged successor company) was formed in January of 2016. TX 221. TD 7 Sports never entered into a CBA with the Union. Undisputed Facts at § 3.c. TD Sports operates 8 at least 40 hours a week. Id. at § 3.p. 9 It appears to be undisputed that effective July 1, 2019, FTC withdrew from participation in 10 the Pension Plan. See TX 1 (September 27, 2021 notice of withdrawal liability). 11 On December 29, 2020, the Pension Fund sent FTC and TD Sports notification of its 12 withdrawal liability assessment of $808,615.00 and demand for payment on schedule specified by 13 the Pension Fund. Undisputed Facts at § 3.m. On or around September 27, 2021, the Pension 14 Fund mailed a second notice to FTC (c/o Darrell Brown) and TD Sports (c/o Timothy Golden) of 15 FTC’s withdrawal liability assessment. Id. at § 3.n.; TX 1. Neither FTC nor TD Sports has made 16 any payments toward the withdrawal liability. Undisputed Facts at § 3.o. 17 B. Discussion 18 The Court next considers the Michael’s Floor Covering factors and the relevant facts with 19 respect to each. 20 // 21 2 Plaintiffs’ witness Randy Rojas testified that the Synthetic Grass Addendum signed with the first 22 CBA continued in force under the second CBA even though it was not attached to or signed contemporaneously with that document. TT Vol. 1 38:13-39:14. The Court does not find that 23 testimony credible, given that the parties expressly entered a second Sacramento Area Addendum but did not include a second Synthetic Grass Addendum even though they clearly knew how to do 24 so. But the Court finds this issue immaterial, because the operative CBA covered maintenance of artificial turf within its scope. The Court finds that it would not make sense for an addendum to 25 add an entirely new, previously uncovered subject matter area to the CBA, and credits Rojas’ testimony to that effect. See TT Vol. 1 30:13-15 (Synthetic Grass Addendum did not add 26 maintenance to the scope of work of the CBA); id. 53:8-19 (explaining that the purpose of the addendum was to cover “bread and butter” details like rates and specific working conditions for 27 contractors preparing, installing and maintaining synthetic grass); TX 204 at 2 (detailing, for i. There Was Substantial Continuity of the Same Business Operation Here, 1 and TD Sports Deliberately Took Over Basically the Same Dominant 2 Customer From FTC. 3 With respect to this factor, which the Michael’s Floor Covering opinion identified as 4 having “special significance,” the Court finds that the trial evidence supported Plaintiffs’ 5 successor liability claim. 6 The evidence clearly established that both FTC and TD Sports got a significant portion of 7 their business from a synthetic turf manufacturer called FieldTurf USA (“FTUSA”) or one of its 8 affiliates. See TT Vol. 1 99:23-100:2 (testimony by Darrell Brown, former part-owner of FTC, 9 acknowledging that when FTC was dissolved in late 2015, almost a hundred percent of its work 10 came from FTUSA); TT Vol. 2 287:7-288:12 (testimony by Tim Golden, CEO of TD Sports, 11 acknowledging that “the vast majority” of $2 million in sales in 2018 and 2019 came from jobs 12 originating with FTUSA or affiliated companies). The evidence also clearly established that FTC 13 and TD Sports were never in the same primary line of business: FTC’s main business was 14 synthetic field installation, and it did not itself perform any stand-alone field maintenance, and TD 15 Sports’ business is synthetic field maintenance, and it does not do field installation: 16 • Ryan Sterrett, a former employee of FTC, testified that FTC’s main business was 17 installing or replacing turf fields, and that he was unaware of any maintenance 18 work (though he believed the company did some work on previously installed 19 fields that were under warranty to remedy installation issues). TT Vol. 2 199:12- 20 18; 209:9-210:17. 21 • Tim Golden, the CEO of TD Sports, confirmed that in the several thousand jobs 22 TD Sports has handled since its inception in 2016, it has never performed 23 installation of synthetic turf fields, and that its primary business is “maintenance, 24 minor repairs, earthwork, site furnishings [like goal posts and soccer nets].” TT 25 Vol. 2 246:18-247:4; 270:11-272:22. 26 • Robert Gloeckner, FTUSA’s 30(b)(6) witness and currently Vice-President for the 27 Western Region of one of FTUSA’s divisions, testified that FTUSA’s business is 1 Construction (FTC’s predecessor) did synthetic turf installation for FTUSA. 2 Gloeckner testified that TD Sports, by contrast, did field cleaning and maintenance 3 as well as “smaller prep work” and “base work” like removing sod and raising 4 electrical boxes. (Gloeckner Depo Transcript) at 8:10-9:14; 18:12-22; 20:10-17.3 5 But the evidence also clearly established that FTC agreed to find coverage for maintenance 6 work for FTUSA customers in Northern California for a period of time starting in 2013 to replace 7 the prior provider of those services, and had actual billing responsibility for those services. TT 8 Vol. 2 322:2-326:15; 234:17-235:3. Darrell Brown testified that someone at FTUSA, perhaps 9 “Tiffany,” contacted him before FTC dissolved about the possibility of FTC “taking on 10 maintenance in . . . California, because the person who had done it had left abruptly.” Id. 322:2-6; 11 TT Vol. 3 47:17-48:8. Brown “grudgingly agreed,” while letting FTUSA “know in no uncertain 12 terms that we did not have a desire or time within our existing schedule to take something on like 13 that permanently.” TT Vol. 2 322:14-18. Brown understood that this arrangement would be 14 needed until FTUSA found a replacement. Id. 322:19-23.4 15 Even though he “had no idea” whether Tim Golden was capable of doing the work FTUSA 16 had asked him about, Brown asked Golden whether he would be interested, and when Golden said 17 he was, Brown put him in touch with FTUSA. Id. 323:3-324:8. Golden’s prior company, called 18 “Cleaner Greener,” used maintenance equipment he leased from FTUSA once it started doing this 19 work. TT Vol. 2 236:9-237:10; 294:24-295:9. Golden worked primarily with FTUSA personnel 20 in this role. Id. 238:21-239:2. Golden reported his maintenance work to FTC, which in turn 21 invoiced FTUSA, then once FTUSA paid FTC, it forwarded the payments received back to 22
23 3 The parties agreed to admit the deposition transcript in lieu of live testimony from Mr. Gloeckner. TT Vol. 2 169:18-170:14. 24
4 Neither party introduced any written agreement between FTC and FTUSA with respect to 25 maintenance work, so the Court assumes this arrangement was based on an oral agreement. The introduction of other written agreements suggests to the Court that if the FTC-FTUSA 26 maintenance arrangement was in writing, it would have been offered in evidence. See TX 211 (June 8, 2020 “Maintenance Agreement” between TD Sports and FTUSA); TX 6 (January 1, 2013 27 “Field Turf Installation Agreement” between FTUSA and FTC regarding provision of “installation 1 Cleaner Greener. Id. 239:12-17; TT Vol. 3 49:20-51:12.5 FTC was compensated for the time and 2 effort that these bookkeeping efforts required. TT Vol. 3 51:17-19. 3 In 2016, Golden transitioned his business from Cleaner Greener to TD Sports to create an 4 LLC and protect himself from liability via this corporate structure. TT Vol. 2 240:1-20; TX 221 5 (articles of organization); TX 260 (operating agreement). At the time of this transition from 6 Cleaner Greener to TD Sports, there was not any real change in the company’s operation, which 7 continued to be “a lot of maintenance.” TT Vol. 2 241:21-242:8. After TD Sports was created, it 8 billed FTUSA directly, in contrast to the Cleaner Greener period during which Golden recalled 9 that he “only billed [FTC].” Id. 297:12-25. 10 The critical import of these essentially undisputed facts is that: (1) FTC “reluctantly” 11 agreed with FTUSA to “take on maintenance” of synthetic turf in California; (2) FTC referred this 12 work to Golden, then invoiced FTUSA for these services in amounts directed by Golden based on 13 the work done; and then (3) FTC paid Cleaner Greener (which later became TD Sports) the money 14 paid by FTUSA in response to the FTC invoices as a pass-through. Without question, as a turf 15 installation company, FTC could have declined to get in the middle between FTUSA and Cleaner 16 Greener/TD Sports with respect to turf maintenance in the way it did. But it chose to do so, 17 becoming the actual party billing and being paid for the maintenance work by virtue of its 18 arrangement with FTUSA, then handing off all aspects of this work formally to Cleaner 19 Greener/TD Sports once FTC closed down. Under these circumstances, TD Sports “basically took 20 over” FTC’s customer base after FTC stopped operating, and this most important factor weighs 21 strongly in favor of a finding of successor liability. See Michael’s Floor Covering, 801 F.3d at 22 1095–96 (explaining that where “an employer uses its insider knowledge to draw a great many of 23 the predecessor’s customers, and so can pick up where the predecessor left off, doing the same 24 type of work as the predecessor, yet neither contributes to the pension plan nor pays withdrawal 25 5 Neither party introduced any invoices reflecting this arrangement, but Defendants were 26 essentially consistent in describing how they executed it. Golden recalled that he invoiced FTC for his maintenance work. TT Vol. 2 239:12-17; TT Vol. 3 300:1-2 (“Field Turf Construction was 27 just like an invoicing tool for me.”). For his part, Brown remembered that Golden would “tell 1 liability, the assumption that animates the construction industry exception collapses”) (cleaned 2 up). In sum, FTC was “doing” maintenance work by billing FTUSA directly for that work in its 3 own name, and being paid for it, even though Cleaner Greener/TD Sports actually executed the 4 work.6 This constituted “substantial continuity of the same business operations” under Michael’s 5 Floor Covering. 6 ii. Use of the Same Plant/ Use of the Same Machinery, Equipment, and Methods of Production 7 The evidence clearly and credibly established that TD Sports was not based in the same 8 location or facility where FTC had been, and that TD Sports did not purchase or take over any of 9 FTC’s equipment (which makes sense, given the very different equipment required to install fields 10 as opposed to maintaining them). TT Vol. 2 245:23-246:17 (Golden testimony that TD Sports did 11 not buy any equipment from FTC, did not use facilities previously owned, rented or leased by 12 FTC, and did not acquire any kind of physical property or real estate rights from FTC); TT Vol. 1 13 145:12-15 (testimony by David Brown that he was personally involved in the sale of all of FTC’s 14 assets, and none of FTC’s equipment was sold to TD Sports). This evidence weighs against a 15 finding of successor liability. 16 // 17 // 18 19 6 Defendant accurately pointed out that in the complaint and during discovery in the case, 20 Plaintiffs did not contend that their successor liability argument was based on FTC having performed maintenance work. TX 219 at 17:2-5 (as part of response to interrogatory directing 21 Plaintiffs to “[s]tate all facts which support your contention that TD Sports is a substantial continuation of Field Turf,” representing that “Field Turf performed synthetic installation for 22 FTUSA, Inc.,” and contending that “TD Sports Group, LLC performs synthetic turf installation and repair and maintenance of synthetic turf installation”). And while Plaintiffs’ witness Randy 23 Rojas testified in a conclusory way that FTC “installed, repaired, [and did] maintenance” while covered by the CBA, TT Vol. 1 24:20-25:4, he acknowledged that there was no documentation 24 showing dues payments for maintenance work, and was unaware of any dispatch reports reflecting such work. Id. 46:6-11; 49:8-10. Similarly, in its proposed findings of fact and conclusions of 25 law, Plaintiffs assert that “TD’s business included the maintenance, repair and installation of synthetic grass.” Dkt. No. 89 at 5. But the purported support for that assertion (with no pin cite) 26 is “Trial Exhibit 212,” which is just a 91-page spreadsheet listing hundreds of jobs in one-line synopses. In the end, though, none of this matters, because whether or not FTC itself actually 27 performed maintenance work for FTUSA customers, it made the decision to enter an agreement 1 iii. Employment of Same Workforce and Supervisors 2 The evidence clearly established that TD Sports does not employ the same or substantially 3 the same workforce as FTC. Over the course of TD Sports’ existence through the time of trial, it 4 has employed between 30 to 40 people. TT Vol. 2 263:11-14. Of these, TD Sports hired three 5 employees from FTC: Eric Bachman, Kevin Couch and Mr. Couch’s nephew Bryce. Id. 251:14- 6 21; 263:15-18. Bachman worked for TD Sports for about six months. Kevin Couch worked there 7 for about four or five years, and his nephew Bryce worked there for about two and a half years. 8 Id. 263:19-264:2. After FTC dissolved at the end of 2105, around 16 of its then-32 employees 9 went to work for FTUSA doing synthetic turf installation work, which required them to maintain 10 their Union membership. TT Vol. 3 9:19-11:9; TX 214. 11 On the other hand, Darrell Brown clearly has been substantially involved in both 12 companies. At the time FTC dissolved, it had two members: Darrell Brown and David Brown. 13 TT Vol. 2 307:20-24; see also TX 216 (Certificate of Dissolution reflecting signatures of Darrell 14 Brown and David Brown, with a third line for “Signature of Director” blank). Darrell Brown was 15 a fifty percent owner, and his brother owned the other fifty percent. TT Vol. 1 69:12-17. The 16 record reflects, without room for genuine dispute, that Darrell Brown then became a manager or 17 member of TD Sports in January 2020 at the latest. TX 271 (January 28, 2020 Statement of 18 Information for TD Sports submitted to the California Secretary of State listing Brown as an 19 “Additional Manager or Member”); see also TX 235 at Bates numbers 189 (“TD Sports Group 20 2020 Organizational Chart” attached to a September 2020 proposal listing Golden (CEO) and 21 Darrell Brown (CFO) under the heading “Owners/Founders”), 175 (September 4, 2020 quotation 22 by TD Sports Group, LLC for turf and facilities maintenance services signed by Darrell Brown as 23 “Owner/Partner”).7 At the time of trial, Brown was CFO and a fifty percent owner of TD Sports. 24 TT Vol. 1 69:2-11. 25 One of the key disputed issues at trial was how early Darrell Brown became involved with 26
27 7 Brown testified that he did not become a “full-time employee” of TD Sports until 2021, and that 1 TD Sports, and the evidence convincingly supports Plaintiffs’ position that he had a substantial 2 role well before 2020. As early as Spring 2016, and continuing on through the early months of its 3 existence and beyond, Brown used a TD email address (darrell@tdsportsgroup.net). See TX 36, 4 34, 35. Brown could not credibly explain why he had this email address years before he 5 supposedly worked for TD Sports. TT Vol. 1 93:5-95:22 (Brown testified that he didn’t remember 6 how he became aware that he had a tdsportsgroup.net email address, speculated that “somebody 7 assigned that to me, evidently, within the company,” said he was only using the email address for 8 “personal things” rather than TD Sports’ business, and contended that because his job at the time 9 with FTUSA involved overseeing and managing the region, he assumed “they probably wanted 10 me to have some sort of awareness as to what was going on in the region with regards to TD 11 Sports’ work”). 12 On April 25, 2016, less than four months after TD Sports was founded, Brown submitted a 13 proposal for work on behalf of the company which he signed as its “Program Manager.” TX 233 14 at Bates 156.8 15 On October 9, 2017, Brown signed an “Application for Original Contractors License” and 16 identified himself under penalty of perjury as TD’s Responsible Managing Employee. TX 10. 17 Brown testified that he “filled that out incorrectly.” TT Vol. 3 36:23-37:2. 18 On June 3, 2019, Brown signed an “Application for Additional Classification” with the 19 California State Contractors License Board in which he declared under penalty of perjury that he 20 was an “owner, general partner, current officer, manager, or member” of TD Sports. TX 40. On 21 the same form, Darrell’s brother David signed under penalty of perjury that he was a “Responsible 22 Managing Manager” of TD Sports. Id. 23 And on September 4, 2020 (prior to 2021, when Brown testified at trial that he became a 24 TD Sports employee), TD Sports submitted a Proposal to the City of Laguna Miguel for 25 “Synthetic Sports Turf and Facilities Maintenance Services.” TX 235. The form indicates that 26
27 8 With respect to this document, Brown “guesstimate[d]” that because his signature was electronic, 1 “By submitting this response, the Proposer warrants and represents to the City” a number of 2 things, including “Signed statement attesting that all information submitted with the proposal is 3 true and correct.” Id. at Bates 170. Brown signed this document in various places as a “member 4 of the partnership or joint venture” and as an “owner/partner.” Id. at Bates 171, 175.9 The 5 proposal said that TD Sports was founded in June 2006 and listed the length of time in business as 6 14 years. Id. at Bates 177. June 2006 was approximately a decade before the undisputed 2016 7 incorporation date of TD Sports, but roughly matched the 2006 founding date of Grass Valley 8 Turf Corporation, the predecessor to FTC. TT Vol. 1 55:17-56:21. On the line directing the 9 applicant to “provide the parent company if applicable,” the form listed “Grass Valley Turf 10 Company, Inc.” TX 235 at Bates 177.10 11 All of this evidence establishes that Darrell Brown was substantially involved with TD 12 Sports not long after FTC dissolved and handed over direct responsibility for billing FTUSA for 13 maintenance work. It also establishes that TD Sports held itself out as essentially a successor to 14 Grass Valley Turf Company and then FTC, given the representations about time in business and 15 parentage. Overall, this factor thus weighs in favor of a finding of successor liability. 16 iv. Existence of Same Jobs and Working Conditions 17 Setting aside FTC’s involvement in billing FTUSA for maintenance work as described 18 above, the evidence regarding the actual work performed by the two companies showed that FTC 19 employees did a fundamentally different job (turf installation) than TD Sports employees (turf 20 maintenance). Installation involves a crew of six to eight workers pulling heavy large rolls of 21 synthetic turf and using sewing machines to sew together panels of turf over a period of days or 22
23 9 In response to Plaintiffs’ counsel’s question “Mr. Brown, are you saying that because—assuming that the signatures on Exhibit 235 are electronic, that you are somehow not responsible for the 24 contents of this document?,” Brown answered “yes.” TT Vol. 1 118:18-22. The Court again finds this disavowal not to be credible. 25
10 When asked by Plaintiffs’ counsel “So are you saying it’s not true, what you put in here?,” 26 Brown responded “I’m saying it might be exaggerated,” and elaborated that “as is the case with job applications, sometimes you fill it out to better qualify, so obviously in this case, that’s what I 27 did.” The Court again finds the contemporaneous representations, made before Brown had a 1 weeks. Maintenance involves using a small tractor and other hand tools like blowers for a day at a 2 time to brush and otherwise maintain the field, as well as some minor turf repairs like regluing the 3 corner of a hashmark. TT Vol. 2 236:9-237:6; 249:24-251:3; 280:22-282:12; 307:25-311:14. This 4 evidence weighs against a finding of successor liability. 5 v. Conclusions of Law 6 a. TD Sports is Liable as FTC’s Successor. 7 Under the Michael’s Flooring factors, Plaintiffs have established by a preponderance of 8 the evidence that TD Sports is liable as the successor of FTC. The most significant factor, 9 substantial continuity, strongly weighs in favor of a finding of successor liability, and Darrell 10 Brown’s substantial involvement in TD Sports starting shortly after FTC dissolved also weighs in 11 favor of that finding. 12 The Court further finds that TD Sports had constructive notice of the withdrawal liability. 13 A successor can be liable for its predecessor’s MPPAA withdrawal liability “so long as the 14 successor had notice of the liability.” Michael’s Floor Covering, 801 F.3d at 1095. In Heavenly 15 Hana LLC v. Hotel Union & Hotel Indus. of Hawaii Pension Plan, the Ninth Circuit held that 16 “constructive notice of withdrawal liability is sufficient to trigger successor withdrawal liability 17 under the MPPAA.” 891 F.3d 839, 847 (9th Cir. 2018). See Resilient Floor Covering Pension Tr. 18 Fund Bd. of Trustees v. Michael’s Floor Covering, Inc. (Michael’s Floor Covering II), No. 11- 19 CV-05200-JSC, 2016 WL 5407848, at *5 (N.D. Cal. Sept. 28, 2016), aff’d, 707 F. App’x 859 (9th 20 Cir. 2017) (“Notice can be proven not only by pointing to the facts that conclusively demonstrate 21 actual knowledge, but also by presenting evidence that allows the fact finder to imply knowledge 22 from the circumstances.”) (internal citation and quotations omitted). The purpose of the notice 23 requirement is “to ensure fairness by guaranteeing that a successor had an opportunity to protect 24 against liability.” Steinbach v. Hubbard, 51 F.3d 843, 847 (9th Cir. 1995). 25 The circumstances of this case present a somewhat novel application of the constructive 26 notice inquiry in the MPPAA withdrawal liability context. Heavenly Hana involved a direct 27 purchase of a predecessor by a successor, and held that a successor-purchaser has constructive 1 using reasonable care or due diligence. Heavenly Hana, 891 F.3d at 847. Further, in Michael’s 2 Floor Covering, the Ninth Circuit held that successor liability may also be imposed “even where 3 the successor did not purchase or merge with the predecessor” when the successor is “well aware 4 of its predecessor’s liability [and] is able to consider that information before deciding to continue 5 the predecessor’s business.” See Michael’s Floor Covering, 801 F.3d at 1093 (cleaned up). 6 Here, the member of the successor company who was or should have been “well aware” of 7 FTC’s withdrawal liability was Darrell Brown. As an owner of FTC, Brown had signed a CBA 8 with his unionized workforce agreeing to contribute to the Pension Fund for covered employees 9 on January 1 of each year of the CBA term, which ended June 30, 2019. See TX 206 at 1, 20. 10 The CBA also included language stating that the Pension Fund had been in “critical status” since 11 January 2010. Id. at 21. Contributing to an underfunded union pension fund as an employer 12 reasonably “should have alerted [Brown] to the possibility of withdrawal liability.” See Bd. of 13 Trustees of Auto. Mechanics’ Loc. No. 701 Union & Indus. Pension Fund v. Full Circle Grp., Inc., 14 826 F.3d 994, 997 (7th Cir. 2016); Heavenly Hana, 891 F.3d at 847 (purchaser’s actual knowledge 15 of unionized workforce and status of pension plan as underfunded established purchaser’s 16 constructive notice of withdrawal liability). Cf. Michael’s Floor Covering II, 2016 WL 5407848, 17 at *6 (holding that the owner of an alleged successor company’s status as former employee of the 18 predecessor company was not sufficient to put him on constructive notice of the predecessor’s 19 withdrawal liability because he was a non-union salesperson at the predecessor, “not an executive 20 who dealt with the union on [the predecessor’s] behalf.”). 21 But at the same time, the evidence at trial did not establish Brown’s role in TD Sports’ 22 initial decision to take over FTC’s maintenance operations. As discussed above, the evidence 23 showed that Brown was substantially involved with TD Sports soon after that point, but his 24 involvement prior to that was less clear. Accordingly, at trial, TD Sports argued that the notice 25 requirement was not satisfied because Tim Golden, the CEO of TD Sports, allegedly had no 26 knowledge of the withdrawal liability until 2021, and Brown was not brought on board at the 27 company until 2020 (which was well after the operations were transferred from FTC in 2016). 1 determination to the Pension Fund, the company argued that to establish successor liability, “the 2 plaintiff must prove that the successor had notice of the predecessor’s withdrawal liability prior to 3 the transfer of the business,” citing Michael’s Floor Covering. See TX 269 at 2 (emphasis added). 4 The Court disagrees with the suggestion that Michael’s Floor Covering precludes a finding 5 of constructive notice here because the record did not show that TD Sports had notice of FTC’s 6 potential withdrawal liability prior to the initial transfer of FTC’s business. To be clear, the Ninth 7 Circuit did not explicitly hold that a successor must have notice “prior to the transfer of the 8 business.” More accurately, the Court held that the notice requirement may be satisfied if a 9 successor “is able to consider” information about the liability “before deciding to continue the 10 predecessor’s business.” Michael’s Floor Covering, 801 F.3d at 1093. And importantly, 11 Michael’s Floor Covering did not address the circumstances here, where the Court can conclude 12 that the successor had constructive notice of the liability soon after the initial transfer of the 13 business. Darrell Brown was substantially involved with TD Sports soon after it took over FTC’s 14 maintenance operations in 2016. As early as 2017, he was identifying himself as a “Responsible 15 Managing Employee” of TD Sports in official documents submitted to state regulators. On these 16 facts, it is reasonable to impute Brown’s constructive notice of the withdrawal liability to TD 17 Sports at the time Brown was involved in a significant role in the company, starting in 2016. The 18 question that Michael’s Floor Covering and other cases have not answered is whether such notice 19 is sufficient to impose successor liability on TD Sports. 20 The Court holds that it is. As the Ninth Circuit reiterated in Michael’s Floor Covering, 21 “fairness is a prime consideration in [the] application” of successor liability. Michael’s Floor 22 Covering, 801 F.3d at 1091 (internal citation and quotation omitted). The notice requirement 23 ensures fairness by “guaranteeing that a successor had an opportunity to protect against liability.” 24 Steinbach, 51 F.3d at 847. Here, Brown was working at TD Sports in a management role several 25 years before FTC’s withdrawal liability was officially incurred in June 2019 when the CBA 26 expired and FTC’s contribution obligation ended. See TX 4 at § 3(b) (withdrawal occurs when 27 employer ceases to have obligation to contribute to the Pension Fund). He thus had ample time to 1 Pension Fund sought to collect it. Under these circumstances, the Court finds that it is fair to 2 impose successor liability on TD Sports to ensure that the company’s informal continuation of 3 FTC’s business “will not shield it from successorship liability,” where TD Sports (through Brown) 4 had sufficient notice to anticipate FTC’s withdrawal liability and could have taken preventative 5 action before it was imposed. See Michael’s Floor Covering, 801 F.3d at 1093; see also Golden 6 State Bottling Co. v. N.L.R.B., 414 U.S. 168, 185 (1973) (holding that “the successor must have 7 notice before liability can be imposed”). 8 b. Judgment is Appropriately Entered Now Against TD Sports. 9 Having found that TD Sports is the successor to FTC, the Court must next decide whether 10 to simply enter judgment against TD Sports in the amount of $808,615.00 (the amount identified 11 in Plaintiffs’ 2020 withdrawal liability assessment), plus penalties, interest and attorneys’ fees, or 12 refer the case to arbitration for a determination of the amount of its liability. Compare Dkt. No. 89 13 at 15-20 (Plaintiffs’ argument) with Dkt. No. 65 (Defendant’s argument). There is no Ninth 14 Circuit authority cited by either party that is on all fours with the facts of this case. But the Court 15 finds that the substantial weight of persuasive authority establishes that Defendant waived its right 16 to contest the amount of liability in arbitration by failing to act within the 60-day timeframe set out 17 in the statute. 18 A pension plan seeking withdrawal liability payment is required under the MPAA (29 19 U.S.C. section 1399(b)(1)) to send to the employer from whom it is seeking those payments, a 20 notification of assessed withdrawal liability and demand for payment pursuant to the payment plan 21 described in it. The employer may then seek review. If the matter is not resolved after the notice 22 described above, under 29 U.S.C. section 1401(a)(1), either party may initiate arbitration within 23 sixty days after the earlier of the date of either (1) the Pension Fund’s notification to the employer 24 of its review and assessment of the withdrawal liability or (2) 120 days after the date the 25 employers’ request for review of its’ withdrawal liability assessment. 26 “The MPPAA statutory scheme has been characterized as a ‘pay first-question later’ 27 system, which means that not only must there be a timely initiation of arbitration, but also 1 with the Fund’s demand while the arbitration is decided.” ILGWU National Retirement Fund v. 2 Levy Bros. Frocks, Inc. (Levy Bros.), 846 F.2d 879, 882 (2d. Cir. 1988). Failure to initiate 3 arbitration within the statutory period results in liability as calculated by the pension fund. 4 Teamsters Pension Trust Fund v. Allyn Transp. Co., 832 F.2d 502 (9th Cir. 1987). 5 Whether a company in a withdrawal liability case is an “employer” within the meaning of 6 the MPPAA “is properly for the courts, not an arbitrator to determine.” Bowers v. Transportation 7 Maritima Mexicana, S.A., 901 F.2d 258, 261 (2d Cir. 1990); see also Unite Here Ret. Fund v. City 8 of San Jose, No. 5:20-cv-06069-EJD, 2021 WL 292533, at *6 (N.D. Cal. January 28, 2021). But 9 the putative employer is “obligated to arbitrate the issues of notice and amount of liability.” 29 10 U.S.C. § 1401(a)(1); Bowers, 901 F.2d at 262. An employer must commence making the 11 demanded payments within 60 days of initiating arbitration under ERISA’s “pay-first-question- 12 later” system. Id. Failure to initiate arbitration in a timely manner and make the payments 13 required results in a default, meaning that the entire amount of the withdrawal liability is due. See 14 id. (agreeing that where the putative employer “did not seek review and arbitration within 90 days 15 of receipt of the complaint,” “a default has occurred”). The Bowers court explained that the 16 employer’s “failure to pay or to preserve its right to arbitration has resulted in a default,” and that 17 while that might “seem a harsh result, . . . the harshness of the default is a largely self-inflicted 18 wound.” Id. at 264. 19 As reflected in a number of cases, it is not uncommon for a defendant to contest its 20 employer status and seek a judicial determination on that issue while also seeking to raise defenses 21 to its withdrawal liability in arbitration. A defendant in this situation has at least three choices: 22 (1) it can timely initiate arbitration, pay the interim withdrawal liability payments, and then 23 receive a refund and interest if it prevails in its defenses; (2) it can bring an action for declaratory 24 judgment and request that the period to initiate arbitration be tolled; or (3) it can request that the 25 pension fund agree to voluntarily toll the period for initiating arbitration, which is expressly 26 permitted under the governing regulations (29 C.F.R. § 4221.3(b)). 27 But what it cannot do is what TD Sports has done here: fail to timely initiate arbitration and 1 consider this issue have held that an alleged employer must initiate arbitration or bring a 2 declaratory judgment action to toll the arbitration period, and several district courts (including 3 some in the Ninth Circuit) have done the same. See Levy Bros., 846 F.2d at 887 (“If a party wishes 4 to seek judicial resolution of its dispute without first submitting to arbitration it should seek 5 declaratory and/or injunctive relief against the imposition of withdrawal liability before the time 6 period to initiate arbitration expires. The failure to seek such relief on a timely basis may, in some 7 instances, lead to a harsh result, but the harshness of the default is largely a self-inflicted 8 wound.”)(internal quotation marks omitted); IUE AFL-CIO Pension Fund v. Barker & 9 Williamson, Inc. (Barker), 788 F.2d 118 (3d Cir. 1986) (defendant who challenged its status as a 10 member of the employer’s controlled group was required to bring a declaratory judgment action to 11 toll period of initiating arbitration or initiate arbitration); Banner Industries, Inc. v. Central States, 12 Southeast & Southwest Areas Pension Fund, 875 F.2d 1285 (7th Cir. 1989) (affirming district 13 court’s holding that employer preserved right to arbitrate by bringing litigation within the period 14 to arbitrate, but noting that it was not “a case in which the party assessed did absolutely nothing, 15 waited until the pension filed a collection against it, and then for the first time tried to assert its 16 defenses in court when it should have proceeded in arbitration.”); GCIU-Employer Ret. Fund v. 17 Progress Printing Co., No. CV 20-4891-DMG (RAOx), 2021 WL 4893355 (C.D. Cal. Sep. 21, 18 2021), at *4 (citing the Third Circuit’s holding in Barker for the proposition that an alleged 19 controlled group member must initiate arbitration or file a declaratory judgment action or waive 20 the defenses it could have brought in arbitration); Bd. of Trs. v. ILA Local 1740, AFL-CIO, No. 18- 21 1598 (SCC), 2022 WL 2117771, at *14 (D. Puerto Rico June 13, 2022) (citing Barker and Levy 22 Bros. in holding that “an entity that argues that it is not an employer because it has never been 23 obligated to contribute to a fund must do something to preserve review and arbitration if it also 24 wishes to contest the withdrawal liability amount”) (internal quotation marks omitted); I.A.M. 25 Nat’l Pension Fund v. TMR Realty Co, 431 F. Supp. 2d 1, 16 (D.D.C. 2006) (“While courts have 26 allowed parties to escape arbitration in certain cases and proceed directly to judicial resolution of 27 withdrawal liability, such circumvention is only proper if the party should seek declaratory and/or 1 arbitration expires.”) (citing Barker and Levy Bros.); Einhorn v. J&S, Inc., 577 F. Supp. 2d 752, 2 762 (D.N.J. 2008) (citing Barker in holding that a defendant challenging its status as employer 3 must still either initiate arbitration or file a declaratory judgment action to toll the period to initiate 4 arbitration). 5 By contrast, Defendant has not cited any authority supporting its argument that now that it 6 has been found to be a successor employer, the Court must refer this matter to arbitration 7 regarding its challenges to the amount of liability claimed. TD Sports essentially contends that 8 disputing its status as an employer relieved it of the obligation to initiate arbitration by the 9 statutory deadline. Consistent with all of the authority cited above, the Court disagrees. If TD 10 Sports thought it had a basis for not being required to timely initiate arbitration, it should have 11 brought an action for declaratory relief, and/or asked the Court to enjoin the statutory period for 12 requesting review and initiating arbitration. See GCIU-Employer Ret. Fund, 2021 WL 4893355, 13 at *4; Bowers, 901 F.2d at 264; Barker, 788 F.2d at 129. It did neither of these things, instead 14 waiting until less than one month before trial to even raise this issue. The Court finds that this 15 course of action constituted a waiver.11 16 Having found that TD Sports is a successor employer, and that arbitration is not authorized 17 at this stage, the Court last addresses the issue of damages. The Pension Fund sent TD Sports a 18 notice of withdrawal liability on September 27, 2021, which TD Sports received. Undisputed 19 Facts at § 3.n; TT Vol. 3 26:15-19. TD Sports requested review of the above notice by letter dated 20 November 23, 2021. TX 269. The company has admitted that it has made no withdrawal liability 21 payments as required under the assessment. Undisputed Facts at § 3.o. It admitted that it did not 22 initiate arbitration after receiving the Fund’s withdrawal liability notice. See Dkt. No. 36 (Answer 23 to Amended Complaint) ¶ 29. TD Sports also did not file a cross claim for declaratory relief 24 11 The Court finds that New York Teamsters Conf. Pension & Ret. Fund ex rel. Bulgaro v. Doren 25 Ave. Associates, Inc., 321 F. Supp. 2d 435 (N.D.N.Y. 2004), on which TD Sports relies, is in key respects consistent with the weight of authority discussed above. See 321 F. Supp. 2d at 443 26 (noting that defendants’ counsel “failed to advise their clients, once in receipt of the withdrawal liability notices from the Fund sponsor, to initiate a declaratory judgment action, the procedural 27 path explicitly and consistently identified by the case law for companies in their position,” citing 1 regarding the arbitration, and never sought relief from the Court to enjoin the payment of the 2 || withdrawal liability or postpone the arbitration. Plaintiffs are thus entitled to entry of judgment in 3 their favor. 4 || I. CONCLUSION 5 The Court finds that Defendant TD Sports, LLC, is liable for the withdrawal liability as 6 || calculated by the Pension Fund, along with penalties, interest and attorneys’ fees pursuant to 7 statute. Plaintiffs are directed to submit a simple proposed form of judgment of two pages or less 8 || by February 11, 2025. The judgment need not, and must not, repeat any of the substantive 9 || analysis in these findings of fact and conclusions of law. 10 IT IS SO ORDERED. 11 Dated: = 2/4/2025 qa 7 Hasparred Lh ih HAYWOOD S. GILLIAM, JR. 13 United States District Judge
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