Stevens v. Employer-Teamsters Joint Council No. 84 Pension Fund

979 F.2d 444
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 16, 1992
DocketNos. 90-3898, 90-3899 and 90-3900
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 979 F.2d 444 (Stevens v. Employer-Teamsters Joint Council No. 84 Pension Fund) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stevens v. Employer-Teamsters Joint Council No. 84 Pension Fund, 979 F.2d 444 (6th Cir. 1992).

Opinion

RYAN, Circuit Judge.

Defendants Employer-Teamsters Joint Council No. 84 Pension Fund and Central States, Southeast and Southwest Areas Pension Fund appeal from the district court’s judgment for Kenneth D. Stevens. Stevens sought a partial pension from Joint Council No. 84 and Central States. After a bench trial, the district court held in favor of Stevens, awarding him a partial pension. Subsequent to entry of the judgment, Stevens died and his widow, Bettie J. Stevens, prosecutes this appeal. Despite winning the judgment below, Bettie Stevens cross-appeals from an earlier order of the district court which held that jurisdiction did not lie under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), 29 U.S.C. § 1132.

I.

BACKGROUND

Joint Council No. 84 is a trust fund with the responsibility of administering an employee benefit plan established pursuant to a collective bargaining agreement between employers and the Teamsters. Joint Council No. 84 was established by a trust agreement that provided, in relevant part:

The contributions shall be made in the amount and at regular intervals required by the collective bargaining agreements between the Union and the Employer, and shall be paid to the Trustees in accordance with the rules and regulations of the Trustees.
The Trustees shall ... Accept and receive all contributions and shall hold, invest, reinvest, manage and administer the same as part of the Pension Fund....

[447]*447Pursuant to the authority granted them under the trust agreement, the trustees established the Employer-Teamsters Joint Council No. 84 Pension Plan. The plan provided, in relevant part:

Each Employer shall pay to the Trustees for deposit in the Trust fund, pursuant to the provisions of the Trust Agreement, the amount per month or the amount per hour with respect to each of its employees and under such conditions as called for in the Pension Agreement between the Union and said Employer.

Central States is also a pension fund charged with the responsibility of administering an employee benefit plan established pursuant to collective bargaining agreements. Central States’ plan provides for payment of partial pension benefits to participants whose years of employment were divided among employers maintaining separate plans. Central States will pay a partial pension if the other plan has a reciprocal agreement with Central States and if the employee’s service credit with Central States is insufficient to.create eligibility for a Central States pension.

Central States and Joint Council No. 84 executed a reciprocal agreement. Therefore, service under one plan may be joined with service under the other plan. Central States treats Joint Council No. 84 as a related plan and credits service to Joint Council No. 84 for the purpose of determining whether an employee is eligible for a partial pension. Partial pension eligibility requires at least 15 years of credited service.

Kenneth Stevens was a truck driver. In 1958, Stevens began employment as an owner-operator with Beatty Motor Express and joined the Teamsters Union. As an owner-operator, Stevens owned his tractor and used it to haul trailers under the control of his employer, receiving approximately 60-70% of the gross freight hauling charge in lieu of a salary. Although owner-operators were not company drivers, they were covered by collective bargaining agreements requiring pension contributions to the union pension funds. During a portion of his time with Beatty, Stevens was apparently the sole owner-operator at Beatty-

A summary of Stevens’ work and pension contribution history follows:

—February 1958 to April 1961: Stevens worked for Beatty, and Beatty paid pension contributions for Stevens to Joint Council No. 84.
—May 1961 to April 1966: Stevens worked for Beatty but Beatty did not pay any contributions to Joint Council No. 84.
—May 1966 to 1969: Stevens worked for Beatty, and Beatty paid pension contributions to Joint Council No. 84. '
—1969 to 1975: Womeldorf, Inc. acquired Beatty. Stevens continued to work for Womeldorf, and Womeldorf paid contributions to Joint Council No. 84.
—1975 to 1978: Stevens transferred to Zanesville, Ohio, and joined Teamsters Local No. 637. Womeldorf paid contributions for Stevens to Central States.
—1979: Beatty transferred to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and joined Local No; 249. Contributions to Central States ceased.

Insofar as it relates to Stevens’ claim for a pension, the crucial period in his work history was from May 1961 to April 1966. During that period, although Stevens was still employed by Beatty, the employer made no contributions to Joint Council No. 84; and neither Beatty nor the union informed Stevens of this fact.

The parties do not dispute that pension contributions were made on Stevens’ behalf to Joint Council No. 84 from 1958-61 and. from 1966-75 and to Central States from 1975-78. The parties also do not dispute that Stevens had credited service from 1966-78. However, the parties strongly disagree whether the period 1961-66 is a break in service. If it is, then the 1958-61 period does not count as credited service. If there is no break in service, Stevens’ period of credited service under the jurisdiction of Joint Council No. 84 runs from 1958-75.

At trial, both sides submitted records covering the period in question. A Report and Remittance form of Joint Council No. [448]*44884, dated March 1961, recording pension contributions from Beatty employees listed Stevens and indicated that the fund received a contribution on his behalf. On the April form, Stevens’ name is crossed off the list, and his name does not appear on the May form at all. Despite this apparent change in Stevens’ status, the form did not provide any explanatory remarks, although for every other employee’s change in status during the period 1961-66, the form contained a code explaining the reason.1 Stevens’ name did not reappear on the form until April 1966, when it noted that he had an “Employment Date” of April 1, 1966. The record also contains ledger cards from Joint Council No. 84 indicating that Stevens’ accumulated service credit as pension contributions were made on his behalf when he began working for Beatty as a Teamster in February 1958. The cards also indicated that he stopped working in April 1961 but restarted in May 1966.

Social Security'Administration (SSA) records and Stevens’ trial testimony presented a different picture. An SSA earnings report establishes that from 1958 through the first quarter of 1969, Stevens received wages from Beatty, and thereafter received wages from Womeldorf. Stevens testified at trial that during the period 1961-1966, he was not aware of any change in his status, either when the contributions stopped in 1961 or when they resumed in 1966. He testified that he “worked steady all that time” and that the first time he became aware that contributions had not been made during that period was when he applied for his pension. When asked if he had cut a side deal with Beatty regarding pension contributions, Stevens replied: “I didn’t make any deal with anyone. All I did was paid [sic] my union dues and worked.”

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Bluebook (online)
979 F.2d 444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stevens-v-employer-teamsters-joint-council-no-84-pension-fund-ca6-1992.