Washington v. Bert bell/pete Rozelle Nfl Retirement Plan

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 21, 2007
Docket05-16366
StatusPublished

This text of Washington v. Bert bell/pete Rozelle Nfl Retirement Plan (Washington v. Bert bell/pete Rozelle Nfl Retirement Plan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Washington v. Bert bell/pete Rozelle Nfl Retirement Plan, (9th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

VICTOR A. WASHINGTON,  Plaintiff-Appellee, v. BERT BELL/PETE ROZELLE NFL PLAYER RETIREMENT PLAN; No. 05-16366 RETIREMENT BOARD OF THE BERT BELL/PETE ROZELLE NFL PLAYER  D.C. No. CV-04-00360-NVW RETIREMENT PLAN; NFL PLAYER SUPPLEMENTAL DISABILITY PLAN; DISABILITY BOARD OF THE NFL PLAYER SUPPLEMENTAL DISABILITY PLAN, Defendants-Appellants. 

VICTOR A. WASHINGTON,  Plaintiff-Appellant, v. BERT BELL/PETE ROZELLE NFL PLAYER RETIREMENT PLAN; No. 05-16533 RETIREMENT BOARD OF THE BERT BELL/PETE ROZELLE NFL PLAYER  D.C. No. CV-04-00360-NVW RETIREMENT PLAN; NFL PLAYER SUPPLEMENTAL DISABILITY PLAN; DISABILITY BOARD OF THE NFL PLAYER SUPPLEMENTAL DISABILITY PLAN, Defendants-Appellees. 

12927 12928 WASHINGTON v. BELL/ROZELLE

VICTOR A. WASHINGTON,  Plaintiff-Appellee, v. BERT BELL/PETE ROZELLE NFL PLAYER RETIREMENT PLAN; No. 05-16845 RETIREMENT BOARD OF THE BERT BELL/PETE ROZELLE NFL PLAYER  D.C. No. CV-04-00360-NVW RETIREMENT PLAN; NFL PLAYER OPINION SUPPLEMENTAL DISABILITY PLAN; DISABILITY BOARD OF THE NFL PLAYER SUPPLEMENTAL DISABILITY PLAN, Defendants-Appellants.  Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Arizona Neil V. Wake, District Judge, Presiding

Argued and Submitted July 11, 2007—San Francisco, California

Filed September 21, 2007

Before: Procter Hug, Jr., Pamela Ann Rymer, and Raymond C. Fisher, Circuit Judges.

Opinion by Judge Rymer; Partial Concurrence and Partial Dissent by Judge Fisher WASHINGTON v. BELL/ROZELLE 12931

COUNSEL

Edward A. Scallet, Groom Law Group, Washington, DC, for the appellants.

Susan Martin, Martin & Bonnett, Phoenix, Arizona, for the appellee.

OPINION

RYMER, Circuit Judge:

Victor A. Washington is a former player in the National Football League. He was a participant in the Bert Bell NFL Player Retirement Plan (the old Plan) until it was amended and merged with the Pete Rozelle NFL Player Retirement Plan on March 30, 1994 to become the Bert Bell/Pete Rozelle NFL Player Retirement Plan (the new Plan). He is now a par- ticipant in the Bell/Rozelle Plan. Both Plans are governed by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), 29 U.S.C. §§ 1001 et seq., and administered by a six-member Retirement Board (Board).

Unfortunately, Washington’s professional career was plagued by injuries. He was a running back and kick returner who began playing in the NFL in 1971. He came over from the Canadian Football League having already suffered a knee injury that required surgery. While playing in the NFL, he hurt his ankle, cracked his knee cap, and underwent surgery on his left shoulder and elbow. Washington left football in 1976. 12932 WASHINGTON v. BELL/ROZELLE His claims history started in 1983 and is extensive. Greatly simplifying it, a player must be totally and permanently dis- abled.1 Since leaving the NFL, Washington has suffered post- traumatic stress disorder and depression. He has sometimes worked, sometimes not. Medical opinions have differed as to whether he was totally disabled or could perform some type of work.

Washington’s first claim was made in 1983 for total and permanent disability benefits under the old Plan. The old Plan classified temporary and permanent disability benefits as “football” or “non-football.” “Football” benefits were paid where the disability resulted from “a football injury.” Benefits at the “football” level were greater than for “non-football” dis- abilities.2 The Board (three of whom are appointed by the National Football League Players Association and three by the NFL Management Council) deadlocked on Washington’s 1983 claim, and referred the issues of total and permanent dis- ability, as well as the cause of disability, to arbitration. On July 10, 1987 the arbitrator, Sam Kagel, awarded Washington “non-football” benefits (as of August 1, 1984), but denied “football” benefits based on the arbitrator’s interpretation of the phrase, “a football injury,” as requiring that a player’s dis- ability be linked to a single football injury. The arbitrator found that Washington’s medical experts had not pointed “to 1 The new Plan deems a player “to be totally and permanently disabled if the Retirement Board . . . finds that he has become totally disabled to the extent that he is substantially prevented from or substantially unable to engage in any occupation or employment for remuneration or profit.” Plan, § 5.2. The old plan defined the phrase similarly. 2 Under the old Plan, § 5.1 as amended through March 8, 1983 provided: Effective January 1, 1983, the monthly pension shall be no less than $4,000 if the disability results from a football injury incurred while an Active Player. Effective January 1, 1983, the monthly pension shall be no less than $750 if the total and permanent disability results from other than a football injury. WASHINGTON v. BELL/ROZELLE 12933 ‘a injury’ that resulted in his having to leave football” and the psychiatrists had not identified “ ‘a’ injury as solely responsi- ble for Washington’s psychological problems.” Washington did not litigate the issue further.

In the same time frame, Kagel decided a series of cases involving other former NFL players in which he applied essentially the same criteria that included, in particular, his view that a player would be eligible for “football” benefits under the old Plan only if he incurred his disability from a sin- gle football injury. The Board, in turn, relied on the Kagel cri- terion of one identifiable football injury in denying Donald Brumm’s request for “football” benefits in May, 1987. Brumm took his case to federal court. It ended up in the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals, which, on June 16, 1993, rejected as unreasonable the same interpretation of the phrase, “a football injury,” in the old Plan that the arbitrator had applied to Washington’s 1983 claim. Brumm v. Burt Bell NFL Ret. Plan, 995 F.2d 1433 (8th Cir. 1993). The opinion recites the course of negotiations between the players and owners that produced the two-tier “football”/“non-football” system in the old Plan. See id. at 1438. The court agreed with Brumm that this system was meant to be a football versus non-football distinction rather than the single injury versus multiple or cumulative injury construction adopted by Kagel and the Board. Thus, the court concluded:

To require that disability result from a single, identi- fiable football injury when the relevant Plan lan- guage speaks of “a football injury incurred while an Active player” is to place undue and inappropriate emphasis on the word “a”. “Injury” can mean either an “act or a result involving an impairment or destruction of . . . health”. Therefore, the key phrase from Section 5.1, “a football injury”, could refer to either a single injury (act) or a cumulative one (result). 12934 WASHINGTON v. BELL/ROZELLE Brumm, 995 F.2d at 1440 (internal citation omitted).

After Brumm, the NFL Management Council and the NFL Players Association agreed on the new Plan as part of a new collective bargaining agreement. The new Plan, of which Washington was notified December 20, 1993 and which became effective as of July 1993, eliminated the “football” and “non-football” categories of total and permanent disabil- ity benefits under the old Plan, replacing them with four new categories: Active Football, Active Nonfootball, Football Degenerative, and Inactive.3 Football Degenerative benefits are paid where the total and permanent disability arises out of “League football activities” and Inactive benefits are paid 3 Section 5.1 sets out the categories as follows: (a) (Active Football).

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