Robert A. Huppeler, Edwin C. Magli and Ellwood Sandmire v. Oscar Mayer Foods Corporation, Plan Administrator, and Pension Plan No. 1

32 F.3d 245
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedOctober 4, 1994
Docket93-3765
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 32 F.3d 245 (Robert A. Huppeler, Edwin C. Magli and Ellwood Sandmire v. Oscar Mayer Foods Corporation, Plan Administrator, and Pension Plan No. 1) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robert A. Huppeler, Edwin C. Magli and Ellwood Sandmire v. Oscar Mayer Foods Corporation, Plan Administrator, and Pension Plan No. 1, 32 F.3d 245 (7th Cir. 1994).

Opinion

CUDAHY, Circuit Judge.

Robert Huppeler began working for Oscar Mayer in its Madison, Wisconsin plant in 1964. His job required that he run (and *246 work alongside) noisy machinery used in meat processing. After working for Oscar Mayer for more than twenty-five years, Hup-peler’s doctors told him in 1990 that he had suffered a 21.1 percent permanent partial bilateral hearing loss. He took early retirement in January 1992.

Under Wisconsin law, Huppeler was barred from bringing a tort action against Oscar Mayer; his exclusive remedy was the right to recover compensation under the state’s Worker’s Compensation Act. See Wis.Stat. § 102.03(2). He thus sought recovery before the Wisconsin Department of Industry, Labor and Human Relations, which on July 13, 1992 awarded him $6,562.62.

But in May 1993 Huppeler received a letter from the Employee Benefits Manager at Oscar Mayer, telling him that every dollar he received in workers’ compensation benefits would be subtracted from his pension. He would therefore not receive his monthly pension benefits, which amounted to approximately $350 a month, for the next 19 months. All of this was pursuant to Pension Plan No. 1 — which was negotiated between Oscar Mayer and Huppeler’s union — and provided that pension benefits would be offset, dollar for dollar, from any workers’ compensation award an employee might receive, save for payment for an injury for the loss of a body member. Despite the commonsense similarity between hearing loss and “loss of a body member,” Huppeler does not contend that his loss of hearing falls within the plan’s “loss of a body member” exception to the offset for workers’ compensation benefits; there is no claim that the plan was improperly administered.

Edwin Magli and Ellwood Sandmire also worked at Oscar Mayer, and following their retirement found that they too had suffered permanent hearing loss. Neither filed for workers’ compensation benefits, however, figuring that they had nothing to gain by it; whatever they received would just come out of their pensions. They, along with Huppeler, sued Oscar Mayer, claiming that the offset clause in the pension plan represents a forfeiture, and is therefore forbidden under the anti-forfeiture provision of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA), 29 U.S.C. § 1053(a). The district court entered summary judgment in Oscar Mayer’s favor, and the plaintiffs appeal.

I.

“The central problem to which ERISA is addressed is the loss of benefits previously promised.” John H. Langbein & Bruce A. Wolk, Pension and Employee Benefit Law 82 (1990). ERISA does not concern itself with the amount of benefits promised. In negotiating the size of the pension on retirement, employers and employees are left free to agree to a large pension, a small pension or no pension. But whatever the size, once those benefits have “vested,” ERISA does not allow the benefits to be “forfeited.” “Each pension plan shall provide that an employee’s rights to his normal retirement benefit is nonforfeitable upon the attainment of normal retirement age.” 29 U.S.C. § 1053(a). The Supreme Court has accordingly noted that the primary motivating purpose of ERISA was to ensure that “if a worker has been promised a defined pension benefit upon retirement — and if he has fulfilled whatever conditions are required to obtain a vested benefit — he actually will receive it.” Nachman Corp. v. Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp., 446 U.S. 359, 375, 100 S.Ct. 1723, 1733, 64 L.Ed.2d 354 (1980). Commentators have observed that “ERISA might easily have been titled the Pension Benefits Antiforfeiture Act.” Langbein & Wolk, Pension and Employee Benefit Law, supra, at 83.

This aspect of ERISA — like much else in our nation’s pension policy — is undeniably paternalistic, see generally, Deborah M. Weiss, Paternalistic Pension Policy: Psychological Evidence and Economic Theory, 58 U.Chi.L.Rev. 1275 (1991). The effect of ERISA’s anti-forfeiture provision is to forbid an employee and an employer from contracting “for a pension plan whose benefits are made contingent beyond ERISA’s permitted forfeiture periods.” Langbein & Wolk, Pension and Employee Benefit Law, supra, at 91. The question presented in this case is one that has caused division among the various courts of appeals: whether offsetting pension benefits by workers’ compensation *247 payments made to an employee, where the payment compensates for “bodily impairment” that the employee suffered, is forbidden by ERISA’s anti-forfeiture provision.

II.

Our examination of this question begins— and, according to Oscar Mayer, should end— with the Supreme Court’s decision in Alessi v. Raybestos-Mcmhattan, Inc., 451 U.S. 504, 101 S.Ct. 1895, 68 L.Ed.2d 402 (1981). The Alessi Court addressed whether, generally speaking, offsetting the receipt of workers’ compensation awards from an employee’s pension benefit amounts to a forbidden forfeiture. The Court held that it does not, and therefore upheld the IRS regulations being challenged. Those regulations provide that “nonforfeitable rights are not considered to be forfeitable by reason of the fact that they may be reduced to take into account benefits which are provided under the Social Security Act or under any other Federal or State law and which are taken into account in determining plan benefits.” 26 CFR § 1.411(a)-4(a). But some of the Court’s reasoning suggested that this determination might turn on the nature of the workers’ compensation award. The tension between the sweeping language in the regulations the Court upheld, and the more layered reasoning offered by the Alessi Court itself, has been the source of some confusion in the lower courts.

The plaintiffs in Alessi argued that any offset in pension benefits for a workers’ compensation award was an impermissible forfeiture. In rejecting this contention, the Court noted that there exists a distinction between depriving a worker of vested benefits, and defining the content of the benefit that, once vested, cannot be forfeited. Alessi, 451 U.S. at 511, 101 S.Ct. at 1900. But this linguistic twist only goes so far — any contractual provision that called for the forfeiture of benefits could be described as defining the content of nonforfeitable benefits. The Court therefore probed further, attempting to discern whether Congress — in enacting ERISA — sought to nullify contractual language in pension plans providing for an offset for workers’ compensation benefits.

A

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Bluebook (online)
32 F.3d 245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-a-huppeler-edwin-c-magli-and-ellwood-sandmire-v-oscar-mayer-ca7-1994.