DAVID G. LARIMER, United States District Judge.
Plaintiff Kathy McElwaney, an employee of Xerox Corporation ("Xerox") brought
Plaintiff's claims center on defendants' prospective application, when calculating plaintiff's retirement benefits, of a so-called "phantom account offset," which, in short, reduces retirees' benefits based on an appreciated value of prior distributions. As this Court has stated before, most recently in Kunsman v. Conkright, No. 08-CV-6080, 2019 WL 4016592 (W.D.N.Y. Aug. 26, 2019), the phantom account has been the subject of much litigation in recent years, and its operation has been described in several decisions of this Court and the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. See, e.g., Frommert v. Conkright, 433 F.3d 254, 257-71 (2d Cir. 2006). For the purposes of this Decision and Order, the reader's familiarity with those decisions is assumed.
Defendants have moved (Dkt. #13) to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim, pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Plaintiff has cross-moved (Dkt. #15) for summary judgment.
Plaintiff alleges in the complaint that she first became employed by Xerox in 1979. As a Xerox employee, she was a participant in the Plan.
Plaintiff was laid off in September 1985, and received a lump-sum distribution from the plan of roughly $6500, which represented her accrued benefit at that time. She was rehired by Xerox about seven weeks later, and has apparently remained employed by Xerox since then.
In July 2015, plaintiff asked the plan administrator to provide her with an estimate of what her retirement benefits would be if she retired in February 2016. Plaintiff alleges that when she received a response on July 21, 2015, she was surprised to learn that her benefits would be lower than she expected. She made a further inquiry, and was told that due to the phantom account offset, her prior distribution of $6500 was "worth" nearly $103,000, and that the latter amount would be subtracted from her benefit. Complaint ¶¶ 25-27.
Plaintiff appealed from the administrator's decision. Her appeal was denied in August 2015. Complaint ¶ 30.
After her appeal was denied, plaintiff apparently learned of the Frommert and Kunsman cases, which had resulted in court decisions invalidating—to some extent—defendants' use of the phantom account offset. She then filed this lawsuit on August 19, 2016, asserting a claim for benefits under ERISA § 502(a)(1)(B), 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B), and a claim for breach of fiduciary duty and injunctive relief under ERISA § 502(a)(3), 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(3). In the complaint, plaintiff seeks an order prohibiting defendants from using the phantom account offset to calculate her benefits when she retires from Xerox, and an order requiring defendants to calculate and pay benefits to plaintiff upon her retirement in accordance with the remedy ordered in the Frommert action.
Defendants moved to dismiss the complaint, largely on the ground that plaintiff's
The issues relating to the parties' motions in this action were also presented in another case involving the Xerox phantom account, Testa v. Becker, 10-CV-6229. Like the case at bar, the Testa action had been brought by a single plaintiff, Robert Testa, and the defendants asserted that his claim was also untimely.
As explained in this Court's recent decision in Kunsman, on December 12, 2018, the Second Circuit issued a decision in Testa, in which it affirmed this Court's denial of Testa's claim for benefits, reversed this Court's grant of summary judgment in favor of Testa on his claim for breach of fiduciary duty, and remanded the case with directions to enter judgment for the defendants. See Kunsman, 2019 WL 4016592, at *1 (citing Testa v. Becker, 910 F.3d 677 [2d Cir. 2018]). The Second Circuit held that Testa had not timely brought suit, and that defendants were not barred from applying the phantom-account offset to him.
This Court stayed the Kunsman action pending a decision by the Court of Appeals in Testa, since both cases involved many of the same issues. Following the Second Circuit's Testa decision, this Court issued a Decision and Order in Kunsman lifting the stay, denying the plaintiffs' motions for summary judgment, granting the defendants' motions for summary judgment, and dismissing the complaint. Id. at *6.
Although the Court did not formally enter a stay in the instant action, the Court likewise deferred deciding the motions pending the outcome of the Testa appeal.
As in Kunsman, I see no reason now not to decide the pending motions, in the wake of the Second Circuit's Testa decision, which resolved the relevant issues of law. Also as in Kunsman, I conclude that based on Testa, defendants are entitled to judgment in their favor.
As to plaintiff's claim for benefits, Testa makes clear that the claim was not timely brought. As this Court stated in Kunsman, "If anything can fairly be said to have now been made clear in these cases, it is that the 1998 SPD [summary plan description] fully and adequately disclosed the details of the phantom account offset, and that the limitations clock began ticking upon plaintiffs' receipt of that SPD." 2019 WL 4016592, at *5. McElwaney's assertion that her claim did not accrue until August 2015, when her administrative appeal was denied, is therefore meritless. See Holland v. Becker, No. 08-CV-6171, 2013 WL 5786590, at *4 (W.D.N.Y. Oct. 28, 2013) (stating that plaintiffs could not "unilaterally extend their limitations period by filing administrative claims years after they were put on notice of the operation of the phantom account," and that "[i]f plaintiffs objected to [the phantom account] offset, their time to challenge it began to run" when they received the 1998 SPD).
Plaintiff devotes most of her arguments on the pending motions to her claim for breach of fiduciary duty. The gist of this claim is that defendants breached their fiduciary duties to her by failing to apply Frommert to her, by falsely stating that the phantom account had always been a part of the Plan, and by failing to inform her of court rulings in Frommert that were unfavorable to defendants. Plaintiff also asserts that this claim is timely, for a number of reasons.
Perhaps more to the point, while this Court in Testa did allow the plaintiff to proceed on his fiduciary duty claim, based on the plan administrator's continued application of the phantom account even after adverse rulings in Frommert, the Court of Appeals flatly rejected that holding and reversed. As explained by this Court in Kunsman, 2019 WL 4016592, at *2, the Second Circuit held that its decision in Frommert "did not order [the plan administrator] to stop applying the phantom account offset to every single rehired employee who was hired before 1998," and that the administrator "could apply the phantom account offset ... to participants who cannot bring timely claims." Testa, 910 F.3d at 684-86. Because Testa's claim was untimely filed, the court held that the plan administrator "did not breach his fiduciary duty by applying the phantom account offset to Testa," and that the administrator was therefore entitled to judgment in his favor. Id. at 686.
The same reasoning applies here. This Court must adhere to Second Circuit authority. Although the underlying facts are obviously not identical to those in Testa, there is no material difference between the two cases, and the Circuit court's rulings control.
Plaintiff's allegations that defendants fraudulently concealed their breach are meritless, inasmuch as there was no breach to begin with, for the reasons set forth above. Plaintiff was put on notice in 1998 of the existence and operation of the phantom account. Her alleged failure to learn of the Frommert case or other litigation involving the phantom account until years later cannot be laid at defendants' doorstep. Plaintiff's suggestion that defendants had a duty to inform plan participants of court rulings adverse to defendants is not supported by the law. See Testa, 910 F.3d at 683 (describing the plaintiff's assertion that "[d]efendants were under a duty to apply any remedy granted in the pending Frommert action to all Plan participants" as a "radical argument," which the court rejected).
Defendants' motion to dismiss the complaint (Dkt. #13) is granted, plaintiff's motion for summary judgment (Dkt. #15) is denied, and the complaint is dismissed.
IT IS SO ORDERED.