Wildbur v. ARCO Chemical Co.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedOctober 5, 1992
Docket91-4255
StatusPublished

This text of Wildbur v. ARCO Chemical Co. (Wildbur v. ARCO Chemical Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wildbur v. ARCO Chemical Co., (5th Cir. 1992).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals,

Fifth Circuit.

No. 91–4255.

KENNETH E. WILDBUR, Sr., et al., Plaintiffs–Appellants,

v.

ARCO CHEMICAL CO., et al., Defendants–Appellees.

Oct. 12, 1992.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Louisiana.

Before KING and WIENER, Circuit Judges, and LAKE**, District Judge.

SIM LAKE, District Judge:

Pintiffs appeal from a summary judgment denying them benefits under their employer's ERISA

plans because the district court concluded that plaintiffs were never terminated from employment.

Plaintiffs argue that although the district court properly applied a de novo standard in reviewing the

eligibility determinations of the plans' administrator, the court reached the wrong result because it

limited its consideration to facts and arguments in the administrative record. Plaintiffs also argue that

the court erred in denying them discovery against the attorneys who advised the plans. Defendants

reply that the court reached the right result and correctly limited its review to the administrative

record, but argue alternatively that because the court erred in applying a de novo standard, its

judgment may also be affirmed under the abuse of discretion standard the court should have applied.

For the reasons explained below, we VACATE the judgment of the district court and REMAND the

case for further consideration.

I. FACTS

Until December 19, 1986, Atlantic Richfield Company ("ARCO") employed Kenneth Wildbur

and the other plaintiffs at one of its subsidiaries, ChemLink Petroleum, Inc. Plaintiffs participated in

the Atlantic Richfield Retirement Plan ("ARRP"), which is a defined benefit plan under the Employee

* District Judge of the Southern District of Texas, sitting by designation. Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, 88 Stat. 829, as amended, 29 U.S.C. §§ 1001, et seq.

("ERISA"). Plaintiffs also participated in ARCO's Special Termination Allowance Plan ("STAP").

The STAP is an ERISA employee welfare benefit plan that pays severance benefits to eligible

employees. ARCO sponsors and administers both plans.

Between 1984 and 1987 ARCO consolidated and reorganized its operations by selling assets

and divisions. In May of 1986 ARCO amended the ARRP to add section 35, which provided for

special enhanced retirement benefits. A plan member was eligible for these benefits if the member

was notified by ARCO between May 6, 1986, and January 31, 1987, that "he or she will be

terminated from employment due to the continuing consolidation of [ARCO], with a termination date

on or before December 31, 1989, as determined by [ARCO]." If an ARRP member was eligible for

special enhanced retirement benefits under section 35, the member's retirement benefits were

enhanced by adding five years to the employee's period of service for calculating benefit vesting,

eligibility and accrual; by adding five years to the employee's actual age for benefit calculations; and

by increasing the employee's average final base pay for benefit calculations.

When ARCO added section 35 to the ARRP it also amended the STAP. Amendment No. 12

to the STAP added Schedule M "Special Benefit Provisions" to provide special severance benefits

to employees who were informed between May 6, 1986, and January 31, 1987, of their termination

because of ARCO's consolidation and who "terminate employment" on or before December 31, 1989.

Schedule M incorporated all of the "rights and benefits" of the STAP, but provided that if a conflict

arose between the STAP and Schedule M, Schedule M would control. Paragraph 4.1(b) of the STAP

stated that a "termination of employment will not be deemed to have occurred if the Employee

continues in the employment of a Company that purchases a Subsidiary or Affiliate, or asset of s

[ARCO]."1 An eligible employee could elect to receive either enhanced retirement benefits under

1 The ARRP does not contain similar language defining termination from employment. Plaintiffs argue that a conflict exists between criteria for eligibility in ¶ 4.1(b) of the STAP and the criteria in Schedule M and that the Schedule M criteria controls. Defendants argue that ¶ 4.1(b) section 35 of the ARRP or the special severance benefits provided by Schedule M of the STAP, but

not both.

On December 19, 1986, ARCO sold ChemLink and other assets to PONY Industries. The

Asset Purchase Agreement stated that PONY will "use reasonable efforts to utilize employees of

[ARCO] in the operation of the Purchased Assets after closing. [PONY] will, not later than five days

before t he Closing Date, specify to [ARCO] the names of employees of the Units whom PONY

propose[s] to employ and those whom PONY do[es] not propose to employ after the Closing." The

plaintiffs are salaried ChemLink workers whom PONY continued to employ after it purchased

ChemLink from ARCO.

After the plaintiffs became PONY employees they requested enhanced retirement benefits

under section 35 of the ARRP and special severance benefits under Schedule M of the STAP. Both

requests were denied by the plans' administrator, the ARRP committee, which concluded that the

plaintiffs had not been terminated from employment.2

Plaintiffs brought this suit in Louisiana state court in September of 1988 against ARCO,

ChemLink, ARRP and the ARRP Trustees to recover benefits under the plans. Defendants removed

the case because the plaintiffs' claims were governed by ERISA, and plaintiffs agree that this action

is brought under § 502(a)(1)(B) of ERISA, 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B).

Commencement of this litigation did not abat e plaintiffs' efforts to obtain relief via the

administrative review procedures provided by the plans. Over the next two years the parties litigated

applies because it does not conflict with Schedule M, and because, even if there is a conflict, plaintiffs are also ineligible under Schedule M. 2 At some stages of the administrative process a separate STAP committee considered and denied plaintiffs' STAP claims. For simplicity we will refer to both plans' administrators as the ARRP committee. in both forums, and both sides sought to use events in one forum to enhance their position in the

other. One result of this dual track litigation was that the district court was in the unenviable position

of continually being asked to review an administrative record that was in a state of flux. After ARCO

filed its first motion for summary judgment in March of 1989, plaintiffs raised facts in opposition that

they had not presented to the ARRP committee. The parties agreed temporarily to stay the litigation

so that plaintiffs could obtain and present new evidence to the ARRP and STAP committees, and the

district court granted several stays to allow the committees to reconsider the plaintiffs' claims in light

of this evidence.

During the second phase of administrative review plaintiffs presented evidence intended to

show that when ARCO sold other divisions it had considered employees who continued working in

the sold divisions as terminated from employment and eligible for benefits under section 35 of the

ARRP.

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