Secretary of Labor v. Doyle

675 F.3d 187, 52 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 2690, 2012 WL 1003547, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 6215
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMarch 27, 2012
Docket10-3598
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 675 F.3d 187 (Secretary of Labor v. Doyle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Secretary of Labor v. Doyle, 675 F.3d 187, 52 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 2690, 2012 WL 1003547, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 6215 (3d Cir. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

ROTH, Circuit Judge:

This case concerns an action by the Secretary of Labor (the Secretary) against James Doyle, Cynthia Holloway, and others, arising from their alleged breach of fiduciary duties to the Professional Industrial Trade Workers Union (PITWU) Health & Welfare Fund (Fund), a health benefit plan governed by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA). After a bench trial, the District Court entered judgment for Doyle and Holloway. The Secretary appeals the District Court’s judgment, contending that the District Court failed to adequately address its breach of fiduciary duty arguments and to consider whether the defendants were responsible for diversion of plan assets held by the Fund. 1 For the reasons that follow, we will vacate the judgment of the District Court and remand for additional factual findings.

I. Background

A. Procedural History

In April 2005, the Secretary brought this action for breach of fiduciary duty against Holloway, Doyle, the PITWU Fund, and two other defendants, Michael Garnett and Mark Maccariella. The Secretary’s complaint alleged that PITWU had established a health benefit plan that was a “multi-employer welfare arrangement” (MEWA) governed by ERISA. Two companies, Privileged Care, Inc. (PCI) and NorthPoint PEO (NorthPoint or NP), enabled small businesses to obtain health benefits for their employees by enrolling the employees in the Fund, even though the employees never joined the union. Privileged Care Marketing Group (PCMG) marketed this scheme to small businesses. Businesses that chose to enroll their employees in the Fund were required to make benefit payments to PCMG. PCMG retained a portion of the payments as compensation and remitted the balance to PCI and NP. PCI and NP also retained a substantial portion of the payments as compensation and remitted the remainder to claims administrators established by the Fund. The complaint al *190 leged that these payments were assets of the Fund improperly diverted by PCI, NP, and PCMG and that PCI, NP and PCMG were required by ERISA to use the assets only for the purpose of defraying reasonable plan expenses for the benefit of plan participants.

The complaint alleged that Garnett and Maccariella at various times owned and operated PCI and NorthPoint and were fiduciaries under ERISA because the payments they received from their business clients were assets of the Fund under their control. Garnett and Maccariella allegedly breached their fiduciary duties to the Fund by using assets of the Fund for purposes other than defraying reasonable plan expenses for the benefit of plan participants. The complaint similarly alleged that Doyle had owned and operated PCMG and that he was a fiduciary because he exercised discretionary control over payments that were assets of the Fund. It further alleged that Doyle had breached his fiduciary duties to the Fund by improperly using plan assets for his own benefit. Finally, the complaint alleged that Holloway was a named trustee of the Fund, had breached her fiduciary duties to the Fund, and was liable both directly and as a co-fiduciary for failing to detect and prevent the diversion of Fund assets by Garnett, Maccariella, and Doyle. The complaint sought restitution of losses to the plan, a permanent injunction against any of the defendants serving as a fiduciary or service provider to an ERISA plan, appointment of an independent fiduciary to manage the Fund, an accounting, costs, and other appropriate equitable relief.

After extensive discovery, the case proceeded to a bench trial in October 2009. Solis v. Doyle, No. 05-2264, 2010 WL 2671984, at *3 (D.N.J. June 30, 2010). At the beginning of the trial, Maccariella accepted a consent judgment enjoining him from serving as fiduciary or service provider to an ERISA plan and requiring him to pay $195,317. A default judgment was entered against Garnett at the close of trial because he failed to appear at trial “[d]espite numerous continuances granted at his request.”

B. The District Court’s Findings

The District Court made the following factual findings based on the bench trial. In 2000, David Weinstein established PIT-WU. Holloway owned and operated Employers Depot, Inc. (EDI), a professional employer organization (PEO) that she had established in 1989. 2 At some point in 2000, she learned of PITWU from a health insurance broker. An attorney, Neil Gold-stein, who later became counsel to the Fund, provided Holloway with verification of PITWU’s union status. On May 1, 2001, Holloway and three other trustees established the PITWU Fund by an Agreement and Declaration of Trust. The Fund initially had two employer members, EDI and Employers Consortium, Inc. (ECI). The EDI and ECI employees were enrolled as participants in the Fund. The Trust Agreement obligated EDI and ECI to make regular contributions to the Fund for each of their employees covered by the Fund. The Fund made annual filings with the federal government, had trustees, counsel, an actuary, and claims *191 administrators. The District Court found that counsel for the Fund never expressed a concern that PITWU was not a valid union or that the Fund was not a valid multi-employer fund.

1. PCI/NP and PCMG

In January 2002, ECI terminated its relationship with PITWU. PCI and NP then became employer members of the PITWU Fund. PCI and NP entered into identical collective bargaining agreements (CBA) with PITWU in which they agreed to make contributions to the Fund so that their employees could receive health benefits under the Fund. 3 The CBAs provided that PITWU had “been designated by a majority of employees in certain client companies of [PCI/NP] as their exclusive bargaining representative for those terms and conditions of employment controlled by [PCI/NP] as per its ‘client Service Agreement.’ ” The “client Service Agreement” referred to a PEO Services Contract, which was executed by clients of PCI/NP who wished to obtain health benefits for their employees. 4 Once an employer executed the contract and began making contribution payments, its employees would become members of the PITWU union and obtain access to health benefits from the Fund. Although the contract allowed clients to choose not to join the PITWU union, clients were required to select the union option to obtain health benefits for their employees through PCI/ NP’s CBAs with the Fund. Similarly, the contract listed a number of additional PEO services, but the only service consistently offered by PCI/NP was health benefits through the PITWU Fund. 5

After PCI/NP became an employer member of the Fund, Holloway and another trustee appointed Weinstein as a trustee of the Fund. Later in May, Weinstein sold PCI/NP to Garnett, resigned as trustee, and was replaced by Garnett. 6

Doyle’s company, PCMG, marketed the services of a variety of entities, including PCI/NP.

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646 F. App'x 230 (Third Circuit, 2016)
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175 F. Supp. 3d 487 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 2016)
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86 F. Supp. 3d 293 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 2015)
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Bluebook (online)
675 F.3d 187, 52 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 2690, 2012 WL 1003547, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 6215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/secretary-of-labor-v-doyle-ca3-2012.