State Ex Rel. Baker v. MORGAN COUNTY WAR MEMORIAL HOSP.

718 S.E.2d 784
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 2010
Docket35298
StatusPublished

This text of 718 S.E.2d 784 (State Ex Rel. Baker v. MORGAN COUNTY WAR MEMORIAL HOSP.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Baker v. MORGAN COUNTY WAR MEMORIAL HOSP., 718 S.E.2d 784 (W. Va. 2010).

Opinion

718 S.E.2d 784 (2010)

STATE of West Virginia, ex rel. Jennifer BAKER, Janet Horner, Sharon Hendershot, Barbara Johnson, Tanya Manley, Helen Miller, Christine Mullen, Ruth Smith, Bernice Stotler, Dee Ann Stotler, Linda Stotler, Barbara Yost, Carol Layton, Nancy Waugh, and Terry Kesecker, Plaintiffs Below, Appellees,
v.
MORGAN COUNTY WAR MEMORIAL HOSPITAL, by and through MORGAN COUNTY WAR MEMORIAL HOSPITAL BOARD OF DIRECTORS, John H. Borg, and Valley Health Systems, Inc., Defendants Below, Appellants.

No. 35298.

Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia.

Submitted April 14, 2010.
Decided June 15, 2010.

*786 Richard G. Gay, Esq., Nathan P. Cochran, Esq., Law Office of Richard G. Gay, Berkeley Springs, WV, John Baldwin, Esq., Pro Hac Vice, Baldwin Law Group, Towson, MD, for Appellants.

Lawrence M. Schultz, Esq., Mark Jenkinson, Esq., Burke, Schultz, Harman & Jenkinson, Martinsburg, WV, for Appellees.

PER CURIAM:

In this appeal from the Circuit Court of Morgan County we are asked to examine an order that interpreted a pension plan and a board of directors' resolution terminating that plan. The circuit court entered a partial summary judgment order finding that the resolution unambiguously terminated the plan, and finding that the plan's language requires any surplus assets in the pension plan to be distributed to the plan's participants (after all of the plan's liabilities have been satisfied).

After careful consideration of the record and the briefs and arguments of the parties, we affirm the circuit court's partial summary judgment order.

I.

Facts and Background

Appellant Morgan County War Memorial Hospital ("the hospital") is a county-owned hospital in Berkeley Springs, West Virginia. It has 41 beds and approximately 180 full- and part-time employees.

In 1972, the hospital created a defined benefit pension plan for its employees. The hospital made routine contributions into the pension plan. Later, retired employees could receive pension benefits from the plan calculated according to a formula based upon each employee's salary and years of service. The parties agree that because the pension plan is a "governmental plan" for a county-owned hospital, rather than a privately-owned pension plan, it is exempt from the statutory requirements of the Employment Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 ("ERISA").

In 1987, the hospital "froze" the defined benefit pension plan.[1] No additional employees were allowed to participate in the plan, and existing participants could not accrue any additional benefits. The names of the employees who were covered by the pension plan, and their years of service, were recorded. Since 1987, the majority of the employees in the hospital's defined benefit pension plan either quit, died before receiving any benefits from the plan, or retired and are receiving a fixed benefit according to the terms of the plan. As of 2009, the parties estimated that only 16 active employees were covered by the frozen defined benefit pension plan. The appellees (and plaintiffs below) are 15 of these 16 remaining employees, and are hereafter referred to generally as "the employees."

The hospital's contributions into the defined benefit pension plan were invested and reinvested over the years. By 2005, the assets in the plan had grown to $817,262.00. However, it appears that under the plan's formula, each employee is only entitled to receive a monthly retirement benefit of about $50.00 to $250.00 per month. An actuary calculated that the total, current cost to buy annuities to provide a vested, fixed monthly retirement benefit to all of the employees covered by the plan, for the remainder of their lives, was only $142,911.00. Put another way, as of 2005, the actuary calculated that there was a surplus in the plan of $674,351.00.

*787 The instant case centers on who, between the hospital and the employees covered by the plan, is entitled to ownership of the surplus in the defined benefit pension plan.

At some point in 2002, the hospital conceived a plan to terminate the defined benefit pension plan, to then set aside sufficient assets to pay its retirement obligations to its employees, and to then use the plan's surplus to (ostensibly) construct a new hospital building. The plan, as written by the hospital in 1972, specified several ways to terminate the plan, including "by resolution of the Employer's Board of Directors[.]"[2]

In February 2004, the hospital's board of directors adopted a resolution terminating the 1972 defined benefit pension plan. The resolution stated that, once the Internal Revenue Service ("the IRS") issued a favorable letter indicating that the termination was acceptable under federal tax laws, the plan's surplus would be returned to the hospital.[3] The hospital's resolution specifically states that "the Plan is terminated[.]" Neither the plan nor the February 2004 resolution stated that approval of the employees or the IRS was required to terminate the plan.

Nevertheless, the hospital sought approval from the IRS and requested a ruling that the hospital could use the plan's surplus without tax consequences. The IRS responded by asking the hospital "whether there is reversion language in the plan" that would allow the hospital to take control of the surplus.

In a letter dated June 8, 2005, the hospital told the IRS that it would "like to adopt an amendment to the plan to provide for the reversion of surplus assets" to the hospital. The letter went on to state:

We have been advised by the hospital's local counsel that West Virginia contract law would allow for the amendment of the plan if all participants provide their consent to the amendment after being informed of the consequences of the amendment. In preliminary conversations with the participants, all have agreed to provide their consent to the amendment.

On October 6, 2005, the IRS issued a letter to the hospital ruling that the hospital's termination of the plan "does not adversely affect [the plan's] qualification for federal tax purposes." However, the IRS qualified the ruling, saying to the hospital that "[t]his determination is subject to your adoption of the proposed amendments submitted in your letter dated 6/8/05."

On December 5, 2005, the hospital made a written proposal to the employees asking that the employees agree to allow the hospital to seize the plan's surplus assets. The document prepared by the hospital clearly states that the defined benefit pension plan "was terminated[.]" The hospital's written proposal asked the employees to waive any cause of action against the hospital and to permit the hospital to take control of the plan's surplus, in exchange for the employees *788 receiving the retirement benefits already owed to them under the plan. All of the employees refused to approve the hospital's scheme.

On January 6, 2006, the hospital's board of directors adopted a new resolution which characterized the February 2004 termination of the pension plan as "contingent" upon the approval of the hospital's employees. The new resolution declared that, since the hospital's employees had not approved of the termination, the February 2004 termination of the pension plan was rescinded.[4]

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718 S.E.2d 784, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-baker-v-morgan-county-war-memorial-hosp-wva-2010.