Filed: Jun. 06, 2017
Latest Update: Mar. 03, 2020
Summary: 16-733-cv Pruter, et al v. Local 210’s Pension Tr. Fund, Local 210 Int’l Bhd. Of Teamsters 16-733-cv Pruter, et al v. Local 210’s Pension Tr. Fund, Local 210, Int’l Bhd. of Teamsters 1 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS 2 FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT 3 _ 4 5 August Term, 2016 6 7 (Argued: November 8, 2016 Decided: June 6, 2017) 8 9 Docket No. 16-733-cv 10 11 _ 12 13 JANET PRUTER, RAYMOND MARQUES, JOHN ARTATES, ELIZABETH 14 AYALA, URSULA BILOSCHAETZKE, DIANE BLAKE, MIREILLE BOYD, 15 MARGO BRADY, IRENE BULL
Summary: 16-733-cv Pruter, et al v. Local 210’s Pension Tr. Fund, Local 210 Int’l Bhd. Of Teamsters 16-733-cv Pruter, et al v. Local 210’s Pension Tr. Fund, Local 210, Int’l Bhd. of Teamsters 1 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS 2 FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT 3 _ 4 5 August Term, 2016 6 7 (Argued: November 8, 2016 Decided: June 6, 2017) 8 9 Docket No. 16-733-cv 10 11 _ 12 13 JANET PRUTER, RAYMOND MARQUES, JOHN ARTATES, ELIZABETH 14 AYALA, URSULA BILOSCHAETZKE, DIANE BLAKE, MIREILLE BOYD, 15 MARGO BRADY, IRENE BULLA..
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16-733-cv
Pruter, et al v. Local 210’s Pension Tr. Fund, Local 210 Int’l Bhd. Of Teamsters
16‐733‐cv
Pruter, et al v. Local 210’s Pension Tr. Fund, Local 210, Int’l Bhd. of Teamsters
1 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
2 FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
3 ____________________
4
5 August Term, 2016
6
7 (Argued: November 8, 2016 Decided: June 6, 2017)
8
9 Docket No. 16‐733‐cv
10
11 ____________________
12
13 JANET PRUTER, RAYMOND MARQUES, JOHN ARTATES, ELIZABETH
14 AYALA, URSULA BILOSCHAETZKE, DIANE BLAKE, MIREILLE BOYD,
15 MARGO BRADY, IRENE BULLARD, CHERYLE CANNON, RHONDA
16 CHANG‐SCHOKNECHT, LISA MARIE COMALLI, VERNEDIA CRAWLEY,
17 SUSAN DEARING, GUDRUN DEVITO, TAMMY DURANT, PAMELA ECCLES,
18 CHRISTINE ERDODI, MARGARUITE EVERLY, SUZANNE K. FLEISHER,
19 MARGARET FOGG, DONNA FRITZ, PATRICIA GEORGE, MARTHA JANE
20 GIBSON, CLAUDIA GODDARD, PAUL GRAHAM, BOBBI S. GRIFFEY,
21 KIMBERLY GRIFFITH, LINDA GRIFFITHS, EDWARD T. HARTNACK, III,
22 ELIZABETH HEFFERNAN, PATRICIA HERRON, TROEN HULETT, VANESSA
23 HYNES, CHARLES I. IRBY, MAUREEN JEPSON‐ZAR, BENEDICT JOHNSON,
24 DONNA KORMAN, LONISE LARBIG, KELLY LAVIK, ARTHUR LEE,
25 BARBARA LEKICH, ANN LLYOD, KAREN L. LOWE, HASSINE MANAI,
26 DALE MARTIN MCNULTY, BERNARD MCPHAIL, JEROME MEADOWS,
27 BEVERLY MONTE, MARY STEPHANIE MOORE, PENELOPE MOORE,
28 MIRIAM DENORIS MOULTRIE, GERDA MUELLER, RAMIRO A. MURILLO,
29 IRMGARD NEUKAMM, STEPHEN OUELLET, DENISE D. PARKER, ALAIN
30 POULENARD, SHARON PRATT, GREGORY RAMIREZ, DAVID RATHERT,
31 MARY YUEN RATHERT, LINDA CHANEY RICE, GARY J. RODRIGUES,
32 VIRGINIA SAXTON, OLAF SCHOKNECHT, SHERRY SEVERN, ARLENE
1 SHAW, WENCKE A. SHISHIDO, BYRON SHUFORD, KEVIN S. SMITH,
2 SUSAN SPACKMAN, RHONDA SPENCER‐SAMS, JULIE E. STONE,
3 STEPHANIE SUGANUMA, CHRISTINE A. TITTIGER, KENNETH F.
4 TOMLINSON, MICHAEL TOUZARD, PATRICIA B. TUNNEY, DOUGLAS
5 TURICH, OLIVIA L. VADEN, YVONNE FLORENCE VERLICCHI, BONITA
6 SHAW WELLS, KATER WESTERMAN‐SCHMID, HERMINE WHALON,
7 PAMELA WITBRO, NICHOLAS WRIGHT,
8
9 Plaintiffs‐Appellants,
10
11 v.
12
13 LOCAL 210ʹS PENSION TRUST FUND, LOCAL 210, INTERNATIONAL
14 BROTHERHOOD OF TEAMSTERS,
15
16 Defendants‐Appellees.
17
18 ____________________
19
20 Before: CABRANES, POOLER, and PARKER, Circuit Judges.
21
22 Plaintiffs, former employees of World Airways, Inc., appeal from the
23 February 8, 2016 memorandum and order of the United States District Court for
24 the Southern District of New York (Torres, J.) dismissing their complaint seeking
25 damages for fraud, breach of contract and violation of an employee benefit plan.
26 Pruter v. Local 210’s Pension Tr. Fund, No. 15 Civ. 1153, 2016 WL 908303 (S.D.N.Y.
27 Feb. 8, 2016). We agree with the district court that plaintiffs’ state law claims arise
28 under the Railway Labor Act (“RLA”) and are thus preempted. As those claims
2
1 bear a close resemblance to claims brought pursuant to the Employee Retirement
2 Income Securities Act (“ERISA”), however, we find it appropriate to borrow and
3 apply ERISA’s three‐year statute of limitations rather than the six‐month
4 limitations period the district court borrowed from Section 10(b) of the National
5 Labor Relations Act (“NLRA”). We therefore VACATE the district court’s
6 dismissal of the RLA claims brought against Local 210 and REMAND for further
7 consideration of that claim consistent with this opinion. We AFFIRM the district
8 court’s opinion in all other respects.
9 Affirmed in part; vacated and remanded in part.
10 ____________________
11 ARTHUR Z. SCHWARTZ, Advocates for Justice,
12 Chartered Attorneys, New York, NY, for Plaintiffs‐
13 Appellants.
14
15 MYRON D. RUMELD, Proskauer Rose LLP (Anthony S.
16 Cacace, on the brief), New York, NY, for Defendant‐
17 Appellee Local 210’s Pension Trust Fund.
18
19 ANDREW S. HOFFMAN, Hoffman & Associates, New
20 York, NY, for Appellee Local 210, International Brotherhood
21 of Teamsters.
22
23
24
25 POOLER, Circuit Judge:
3
1 Plaintiffs, former employees of World Airways, Inc., appeal from the
2 February 8, 2016 memorandum and order of the United States District Court for
3 the Southern District of New York (Torres, J.) dismissing their complaint seeking
4 damages for fraud, breach of contract and violation of an employee benefit plan.
5 Pruter v. Local 210’s Pension Tr., No. 15 Civ. 1153 (AT), 2016 WL 908303 (S.D.N.Y.
6 Feb. 8, 2016). We agree with the district court that plaintiffs’ state law claims arise
7 under the Railway Labor Act (“RLA”), 45 U.S.C. § 151, et seq., and are thus
8 preempted. As those claims bear a close resemblance to claims brought pursuant
9 to the Employee Retirement Income Securities Act (“ERISA”), however, we find
10 it appropriate to borrow and apply the three‐year statute of limitations set forth
11 in Section 1113 of ERISA rather than the six‐month limitations period the district
12 court borrowed from Section 10(b) of the National Labor Relations Act
13 (“NLRA”), 29 U.S.C. § 160(b). Our holding is consistent with our precedents
14 “reject[ing] the argument that uniformity among borrowing limitations is needed
15 among all labor cases” since suits against unions “encompass[] many varieties of
16 actions.” Phelan v. Local 305 of United Ass’n of Journeymen, 973 F.2d 1050, 1059 (2d
17 Cir. 1992). We therefore VACATE the district court’s dismissal of the RLA claims
18 brought against Local 210 and REMAND for further consideration of that claim
4
1 consistent with this opinion. We AFFIRM the district court’s opinion in all other
2 respects.
3 BACKGROUND
4 Plaintiffs are former employees of World Airways, Inc. and participants in
5 Local 210’s Pension Trust Fund (the “Fund”). The Fund provides pension
6 benefits to participants and beneficiaries pursuant to an employee benefit plan
7 (the “Plan”). The Plan is a multiemployer plan within the meaning of section 3(1)
8 of ERISA, 29 U.S.C. § 1002. Pension benefits are paid based on service credits.
9 Service credits are generally earned based on an employee’s years of covered
10 service, that is, service for a contributing employer while an employee is a
11 participant in the Plan. Service credits may also be awarded based on past
12 credited service, which is a credit for an employee’s periods of covered service
13 with an employer that predate the employer joining the Plan. The Plan also
14 allows for the cancellation of past service credits if (1) the participant’s employer
15 is no longer a participating employer in the Plan and (2) cancelling the past
16 service credits is in the interest of preserving the Fund’s actuarial soundness. The
17 Plan grants the Fund’s trustees (the “Trustees”) “the exclusive right, power, and
18 authority, in their sole and absolute discretion, to administer, apply[,] and
5
1 interpret the Plan,” and “to decide all matters arising in connection with the
2 operation or administration of the Plan.” App’x at 83 § 10.1.
3 Until 1996, World Airways employees were represented for collective
4 bargaining purposes by the International Brotherhood of Teamsters Local 732.
5 The collective bargaining agreement between the World Airways and Local 732
6 provided that Plaintiffs were to be enrolled in World Airway’s retirement plan
7 (the “Target Benefit Plan”). World Airways was obligated to pay 1.8 percent of
8 each employee’s gross annual salary into the Target Benefit Plan.
9 In 1996, Local 732 merged with the International Brotherhood of
10 Teamsters Local 210, after which Plaintiffs were represented by Local 210. In the
11 spring of 1996, Local 210 took over negotiations with World Airways for a new
12 collective bargaining agreement. Plaintiffs allege that, as part of those
13 negotiations, Local 210 offered to replace the Target Benefit Plan with the Plan.
14 Plaintiffs allege that Local 210 promised them that (1) World Airways would be
15 required to make a monthly contribution for post‐1996 service and for past
16 service time after participants completed a five‐year vesting period; and (2) Local
17 201 would assume all pension liability for past service credit if World Airways
18 could not or would not fund the Plaintiffs’ past service credits.
6
1 A June 17, 1996 letter sent from the Local 210 negotiating team to Local 210
2 members, including Plaintiffs, stated in relevant part:
3 PENSION AND PENSION VESTING GUARANTEE
4 [International Brotherhood of Teamsters] Demand:
5 The [T]arget [B]enefit [P]lan provided by [World
6 Airways] is woefully inadequate and must be replaced.
7 It operates on the assumption that the money
8 contributed by [World Airways] will earn 8% interest
9 and it has consistently failed to do so. [World Airways]
10 refused to take on the financial burden that would
11 provide each of us with a decent retirement.
12
13 We are very pleased to advise that Local 210 offers
14 retirement plans for its members where the employer
15 does not have sufficient funds or is unwilling to commit
16 the necessary cash to provide a viable retirement. Local
17 210 has designed a federally insured, 100% funded,
18 “defined benefit plan” to which [World Airways] will
19 provide monthly contribution with a 100% past service
20 credit after a 5 year vesting period. This will provide an
21 extraordinary improvement in our benefit from today’s
22 level.
23
24 This is possible because, while [World Airways] will
25 never contribute enough money to have purchased the
26 benefit for us, our Union (and the members of our local
27 who will vote to accept us into their plan) are willing to
28 accept the liability to protect and make a long term
29 commitment to represent us.
30
31 App’x at 109.
7
1 In a July 9, 1996 letter to all Local 210 members on reaching a new
2 agreement, Local 210’s trustee‐agent stated:
3 I would like to explain to you the depth of
4 commitment this Local union has for its new members.
5 With the approval of Secretary‐Treasurer Angelo
6 Martin, this Local created a new Pension Plan for the
7 employees at World Airways. This plan which I
8 negotiated into your contract, gives Pension credit to all
9 members back to the date of hire, after vesting. In other
10 words if you have worked for the company for ten (10)
11 years to date, and you work another five (5) years, at
12 retirement you will receive $600.00 per month for life.
13
14 This Pension Plan has a cost to the Union of over
15 $700,000.00 which we are willing to pay to secure a
16 better tomorrow for our new members.
17
18 App’x at 112.
19 Plaintiffs allege that, as a result of these representations, they agreed to
20 ratify the collective bargaining agreement, switch to the Plan, and accept a lower
21 amount of wage increases in return for payments into the Fund by World
22 Airways. Plaintiffs, who all have five years of post‐1996 work credit with World
23 Airways, allege that each was “advised, on numerous occasions, that he or she
24 had been given past‐service credit,” and that, as a result, “each was to receive 100
25 percent of their service credit for the years before World began to contribute to
8
1 the Plan.” App’x at 121‐22. Plaintiffs also allege that World Airways made
2 “contributions between 1996 and 2001 over and above what they were obligated
3 to pay for post‐1996 pension credit for each of the Plaintiffs, so that by 2001 they
4 had funded the pre‐1996 service credits and turned them into ‘future’ service
5 credits under the terms of the [] Plan.” App’x at 33 ¶ 109.
6 World Airways filed for bankruptcy protection in 2012. Once it entered
7 bankruptcy, World Airways ceased to be a contributing member of the Fund and
8 was assessed withdrawal liability pursuant to ERISA in excess of $18 million.
9 World Airway’s withdrawal liability was discharged in bankruptcy.
10 In December 2012, the Fund’s trustees (the “Trustees”) voted to cancel the
11 past service credits of World Airways’ employees, including Plaintiffs, pursuant
12 to the terms of the Plan that vests the Trustees with discretion to act in the
13 interests of preserving the actuarial soundness of the Fund. That language vests
14 the Trustees with broad authority to “cancel the past service credits in the
15 interests of preserving the Fund’s actuarial soundness.” App’x 90‐91 § 14.5(b).
16 On remand, the district court need not reconsider the Plaintiffs’ arguments
17 related to whether the Trustee had authority to cancel credits under the Plan’s
18 terms.
9
1 The Trustees told Plaintiffs that neither World Airways, nor any other
2 party, had funded the pre‐1996 service credits. Plaintiffs, through counsel, asked
3 to review the record of contributions from World Airways to the Fund, but the
4 request was denied. Plaintiffs allege that the cancellation of credits from before
5 1996 drastically reduced their monthly pension benefit.
6 The Trustees informed Plaintiffs that the Fund’s third‐party administrator
7 verified that World Airways did not make any contributions for service prior to
8 1996. The Trustees asked Plaintiffs to submit any documentation that supported
9 their claim that past service credits had, in fact, been funded. Plaintiffs submitted
10 a letter to the Fund on May 8, 2013 stating that:
11 We are not saying that contributions were made
12 prior to 1996. We are saying that after 1996, World
13 made extra contributions to cover the pre‐1996 period.
14 Every member of the union’s negotiating team confirms
15 that this was the arrangement.
16
17 App’x at 130. On June 5, 2013, the Trustees advised Plaintiffs that the Fund’s
18 actuary conducted another examination of the contribution records of the Fund
19 and determined that World did not make extra contributions to fund the
20 pre‐1996 service credits. The Trustees again asked Plaintiffs if they had any
21 “documentation or evidence to substantiate their allegations that additional
10
1 contributions were made on their behalf” by World Airways. App’x at 131‐32.
2 Plaintiffs’ counsel responded that Plaintiffs were relying on “discussion with
3 flight attendants who served on Local 210’s negotiating committee, and who
4 discussed the agreement with World, in making our assertions. The Fund and its
5 actuaries would have the details, which is why we would want to meet.” App’x
6 at 133.
7 The Trustees made a final determination denying Plaintiffs’ claims on June
8 14, 2013, relayed via counsel:
9 I have advised you that the actuary for Local 210’s
10 Pension Plan (“Plan”) has reviewed the files and
11 contributions made on behalf of the World Airways
12 (“World”) flight attendants and has found no evidence
13 that would support your claim that additional
14 contributions were made to fund the past service credits
15 for the flight attendants. The contributions received by
16 the Plan are consistent with future credits only. Since
17 your clients have no evidence to sustain their claim and
18 the Plan’s documents indicate that no additional or
19 enhanced payments were made to fund past service
20 credits, my client sees no point in meeting with your
21 clients to discuss this matter.
22 . . .
23 As for your question as to whether your clients have
24 exhausted their administrative appeals, I have no way
25 of responding to that query. You have advised me you
26 have over forty (40) clients. I do not know their
11
1 identities or where they are in the administrative
2 process.
3
4 App’x at 134‐35.
5 Plaintiffs then brought the instant suit. Their complaint alleges that the
6 Trustees violated the terms of the Plan by cancelling past service credits earned
7 by Plaintiffs and that Local 210 committed fraud and breach of contract by
8 promising to fund the service credits and then reneging on that promise. The
9 Fund and Local 210 moved to dismiss, and the district court granted their
10 motions. The district court determined that Plaintiffs’ breach of contract and
11 fraud claims were preempted by the RLA and thus were subject to a six‐month
12 statute of limitations. Pruter, 2016 WL 908303, at *3. It dismissed the claims
13 against Local 210 as time barred by a six‐month statute of limitation. Id. The
14 district court also dismissed the claim against the Fund on the ground that the
15 decision to remove the past service credits was not arbitrary and capricious. Id. at
16 *2. This appeal followed.
17 DISCUSSION
18 “We review de novo a district courtʹs dismissal of a complaint for failure to
19 state a claim, accepting all factual allegations in the complaint as true and
12
1 drawing all reasonable inferences in plaintiffsʹ favor.” Freidus v. Barclays Bank
2 PLC, 734 F.3d 132, 137 (2d Cir. 2013); Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 556 U.S. 662, 678 (2009).
3 I. Preemption of State Law Claims by the Railway Labor Act
4 Plaintiffs first argue that the district court erred in finding that their state
5 law claims alleging fraud and breach of contract against Local 210 were
6 preempted by the RLA because they do not seek to enforce, interpret, or
7 otherwise challenge the ratification process or collective bargaining agreement.
8 We disagree and hold that their state law claims were preempted. The RLA
9 preempts potentially conflicting state causes of action even if the state law does
10 not actually conflict with the federal law and regardless of the nature of the state
11 law claim, whether it be tort, contract, or a specialized labor statute. Lindsay v.
12 Assʹn of Prof’l Flight Attendants, 581 F.3d 47, 57‐60 (2d Cir. 2009). The RLA
13 explicitly governs bargaining concerning pay or working conditions. See 45
14 U.S.C. § 152. State law claims relating to “conduct during collective bargaining
15 negotiations” are also preempted. Lindsay, 581 F.3d at 59‐60 (explaining “that the
16 imposition of additional state liability . . . would upset the ‘balance of power’
17 established by the RLA and ‘frustrate effective implementation of the Act’s
18 processes’” (internal citation and brackets omitted); see also Cooper v. TWA
13
1 Airlines, LLC, 349 F. Supp. 2d 495, 507‐08 (E.D.N.Y. 2004) (“[S]tate law claims that
2 are ‘mere refinements’ of the duty of fair representation are preempted.”).
3 Plaintiffs’ claims against Local 210 implicate representations made during the
4 process of negotiating and ratifying the collective bargaining agreement. The
5 district court, therefore, correctly found those claims preempted by the RLA.
6 II. Applying a Three‐Year Statute of Limitations
7 The RLA does not specify the statute of limitations applicable to a claim for
8 breach of the duty of fair representation. “In such situations we do not
9 ordinarily assume that Congress intended that there be no time limit on actions
10 at all; rather, our task is to ‘borrow’ the most suitable statute or other rule of
11 timeliness from some other source.” DelCostello v. Int’l Bhd. of Teamsters, 462 U.S.
12 151, 158 (1983). In DelCostello, the Supreme Court borrowed the six‐month statute
13 of limitations period in Section 10(b) of the National Labor Relations Act
14 (“NLRA”) and applied it to hybrid lawsuits, in which a party brings claims
15 against both an employer and a union. Id. at 169‐72. An example of a hybrid
16 lawsuit is one in which employees sues their employer alleging a breach of the
17 collective bargaining agreement and sue the union alleging a breach of its duty of
18 fair representation by mishandling the ensuing grievance or arbitration
14
1 proceeding. Id. at 170. Our Court extended DelCostello by borrowing Section
2 10(b)’s six‐month limitations for duty of fair representation claims where such
3 claims “directly implicated the collective bargaining relationship.” Phelan v. Local
4 305 of United Ass’n of Journeymen, 973 F.2d 1050, 1060 (2d Cir. 1992); see also
5 Haerum v. Air Line Pilots Assʹn, 892 F.2d 216, 219 (2d Cir. 1989) (applying six‐
6 month limitations period to duty of fair representation claim based on the
7 union’s failure to file a grievance on, or renegotiate the issue of, pilot seniority).
8 The district court here relied on Haerum when it applied a six‐month limitations
9 period to Plaintiffs’ claims without any further analysis, but Haerum interpreted
10 claims brought under Labor Management Reporting and Disclosure Act
11 (“LMRDA”), 29 U.S.C. § 411 et. seq., which is not the statute at issue here.
12 Unlike the claims in Phelan, the claims in this appeal do not “directly
13 implicate the collective bargaining relationship” and thus require a different
14 approach. Phelan, 973 F.2d at 1060. We previously recognized that “[t]he
15 problems in choosing the proper statute to borrow are compounded in the labor
16 area,” and thus we must “analyze [each] labor case on its facts before choosing
17 which limitations period to borrow.” Id. at 1058‐59 (citing Reed v. United
18 Transportation Union, 488 U.S. 319 (1983) (noting that the “Supreme Court has
15
1 rejected the argument that uniformity among borrowing limitations is needed
2 among all labor cases . . .”)). Moreover, “where (1) a federal rule of limitations
3 clearly provides a closer analogy than state alternatives, and (2) the federal
4 policies at stake and the practicalities of the litigation render the federal
5 limitation ‘a significantly more appropriate vehicle for interstitial lawmaking,’”
6 we borrow the limitations period from federal law. Id. at 1058.
7 Here, Plaintiffs seek to hold Local 210 to a pledge they allege the union
8 made, namely, a promise that if World Airways failed to fund the past service
9 credits, Local 210 would fund those credits so that union members did not lose
10 pension benefits because of the switch from the Target Benefit Plan to the Plan.
11 Plaintiffs urge us to find that their claims most resemble a claim for pension
12 benefits asserted under ERISA such that the appropriate statute of limitations to
13 borrow is the three‐year period set forth in Section 1113(2) of ERISA applies. We
14 agree.
15 The Third Circuit took a similar approach in Adams v. Gould Inc., which
16 involved a settlement the union reached with the employer over collectively
17 bargained pension benefits. 739 F.2d 858 (3d Cir. 1984). Briefly, the Adams
18 plaintiffs—all former employees—alleged that the employer and union entered
16
1 into a settlement agreement that failed to comply with an arbitrator’s award
2 regarding the benefits. Id. at 861. The Adams plaintiffs alleged a violation of the
3 collective bargaining agreement by the employer and a breach of the unionʹs
4 duty of fair representation. Defendants argued that the action was barred by the
5 six‐month statute of limitations contained in Section 10(b) of the NLRA. Id. at
6 866. The Third Circuit disagreed, finding the claims more akin to a pension claim
7 implicated by ERISA such that borrowing the three‐year limitations period in
8 Section 1113(2) better furthered the federal policies at stake. Id. at 867.
9 In particular, the Adams Court noted that a hybrid lawsuit, such as the one
10 at issue in DelCostello, “normally involves an issue that is intertwined with the
11 day‐to‐day relationship between management and labor. Speed and finality in
12 the resolution of disputes are the most relevant policies in those situations.” Id. at
13 867. “In pension dispute[s], however, that policy is less relevant.” Id. “The
14 absence of an effect on their day‐to‐day working environment also makes it far
15 more likely that employees will not be aware of their grievance immediately.
16 These factors favor the application of a longer period of limitations.” Id.
17 We adopt an approach similar to that of the Third Circuit. Since the claims
18 at issue here do not touch on the relationship between an employer and the
17
1 union, but instead touch on the relationship between the employee and the
2 union, the longer limitations period in ERISA is the appropriate period to
3 borrow:
4 We believe that there is a distinction between the
5 implication of delay in resolving disputes over pension
6 contribution issues and the implications of delay in
7 resolving disputes over terms of a collective bargaining
8 agreement that affect the day‐to‐day operations of a
9 business. We also believe that this distinction justifies
10 the use of a different limitations period.
11
12 Id.; see also Phelan, 973 F.2d at 1061 (holding Section 10(b) limitations period did
13 not apply to claim alleging a breach of the union’s constitution because
14 “[r]esolution of claims concerning breach of a union constitution that do not
15 relate to formation of a collective bargaining agreement [do] not have a direct
16 and immediate impact on union‐management relations”).
17 We recognize that the Seventh Circuit declined to follow Adams, stating it
18 was reluctant to apply different statutes of limitations to duty of fair
19 representation claims that arise out of “the employment terms of collective
20 bargaining agreements (and to the negotiations leading to them)” and to claims
21 arising out of “the pension terms of the same agreements (arising from the same
22 negotiations).” United Indep. Flight Officers, Inc. v. United Air Lines, Inc., 756 F.2d
18
1 1262, 1273 (7th Cir. 1985); see also Lea v. Republic Airlines, Inc., 903 F.2d 624, 633
2 (9th Cir. 1990) (adopting Seventh Circuit’s rationale in United Independent and
3 applying a six‐month limitation period to a hybrid RLA/ERISA claim).
4 Contrary to the Seventh Circuit, our Circuit previously endorsed choosing
5 the appropriate statute of limitations to borrow based on the facts of a particular
6 case, rather than applying a single limitations period to all labor claims. See
7 Phelan, 973 F.2d at 1060‐61. As discussed above, Plaintiffs here seek to hold Local
8 210 accountable for promises they allege Local 210 made to employees whom
9 they represented in negotiations over their pensions. We believe this situation is
10 different from plaintiffs who seek to challenge or enforce the terms of a collective
11 bargaining agreement against the employer, as occurred in Adams. Accordingly,
12 a three‐year ERISA statute of limitations should be applied.
13 Applying the three‐year ERISA statute of limitations allows Plaintiffs to
14 bring suit within three years of “the earliest date on which the plaintiff had
15 actual knowledge of the breach.” 29 U.S.C. § 1113(2). The Plaintiffs discovered
16 the past service credits were not funded in December 2012, when the Fund
17 cancelled their credits. Plaintiffs sued in February 2015, thus making their claims
18 timely.
19
1
2
3 III. Whether Local 210’s Promise is Enforceable
4 Local 210 argues in the alternative that, even if Plaintiffs’ claims are timely,
5 Plaintiffs do not set forth a legally sufficient cause of action because federal law
6 bars the union from making such contributions to the Fund on behalf of the
7 Plaintiffs. Local 210 argues that under the terms of the trust agreement
8 governing the Fund and pursuant to Section 302(c)(5) of the Labor Management
9 Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. § 401, contributions to the Fund may only be made by
10 employers on behalf of employees. Thus, it argues, Local 210 could not legally
11 fulfill the alleged promise and Plaintiffs’ claims should be dismissed.
12 The district court did not address this argument, and we decline to do so
13 for the first time here. Even assuming a payment by Local 210 into the Fund is
14 not permissible, other remedies may be available to Plaintiffs. See, e.g., App’x at
15 36 (including in prayer for relief a demand that Local 210 pay directly to
16 Plaintiffs monies in an amount that compensates Plaintiffs for the lost past
17 service credits). We leave this issue for consideration by the district court in the
18 first instance.
20
1
2 IV. Plaintiffs’ ERISA claim against the Fund
3 Finally, Plaintiffs challenge the district court’s dismissal of their claim
4 against the Fund, brought pursuant to Section 502(a)(1)(B) of ERISA1, on the
5 ground that the actions of the Trustees were arbitrary and capricious. Pruter,
6 2016 WL 908303, at *2. Plaintiffs argue the district court erred in dismissing the
7 claim because the Trustees failed to present the district court with an adequate
8 administrative record. We disagree.
9 The administrative record “properly consists of the evidence before the
10 entity that decided the claim when that decision was rendered.” Allison v. Unum
11 Life Ins. Co., No. cv 04‐0025, 2005 WL 1457636, * 9 (E.D.N.Y. 2005); see also
12 Ocampo v. Bldg. Serv. 32B–J Pension Fund,
787 F.3d 638 (2d Cir. 2015) (rejecting
13 a challenge to the administrative record in an ERISA case); Miles v. Principal Life
14 Ins. Co., 720 F.3d 472, 486 (2d Cir. 2013). All of the information considered by the
15 Trustees is contained in the exhibits to the complaint and in the documents
1
We, like the district court, construe Plaintiffs’ claim against the Fund as a claim
brought to enforce the right to benefits under a pension plan pursuant to Section
502(a)(1)(B) of ERISA. See Pruter, 2016 WL 908303, at *2 n.2.
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1 attached as exhibits to the declaration submitted by the Fund in support of its
2 motion to dismiss. There is no requirement that the administrative record be
3 collated in a particular fashion or that it be produced via affidavit. So long as the
4 district court is provided with all of the information considered by the Trustees
5 in making their decision, the requirement for an administrative record is
6 satisfied.
7 Plaintiffs also argue that the administrative record is incomplete because a
8 letter stating that the Trustees had an actuary confirm that the required
9 contributions were not made by either World Airways or Local 210 does not
10 suffice. Plaintiffs argue that they were told their past service credits were fully
11 funded, and that the Fund must demonstrate that is not true. However, a
12 plaintiff bears the burden of demonstrating entitlement to ERISA benefits. Miles
13 v. Principal Life Ins. Co., 720 F.3d 472, 488 (2d Cir. 2013). Plaintiffs here lack any
14 evidence that the requisite payments were made. The Trustees undertook an
15 investigation and found no evidence to support Plaintiffs’ claims. Plaintiffs were
16 afforded multiple opportunities to supplement the administrative record with
17 evidence to support their claim to benefits under the Plan, and failed to do so.
22
1 Accordingly, the district court did not err in dismissing the ERISA claim against
2 the Fund.
3 CONCLUSION
4 For the reasons set forth above, we VACATE the district court’s dismissal
5 of Plaintiffs’ RLA claims against Local 210, AFFIRM the district court’s dismissal
6 of the Plaintiffs’ ERISA claims against the Fund, and REMAND for further
7 consideration of Plaintiffs’ remaining claims consistent with this opinion.
8
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