LEWIS A. KAPLAN, District Judge.
Plaintiffs, participants in The Lehman Brothers Savings Plan (the "Plan"), here purport to bring a state law breach of fiduciary duty claim against Fidelity Management Trust Company ("Fidelity"), the Plan trustee. They contend that Fidelity improperly has failed to sue Ernst & Young, the outside auditor for Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., on behalf of the Plan for professional malpractice. Fidelity moves to dismiss the complaint as to it on several grounds.
The Plan is a 401(k) plan sponsored by Lehman that provided eligible employees with a means of saving for retirement.
ERISA, with certain exceptions, requires that the assets of all plans be held in trust by one or more trustee who has exclusive discretion for safeguarding the assets.
In this case, the Plan establishes that Fidelity was such a directed trustee with respect to the management of the Plan assets. The Committee, as the Named Fiduciary, is responsible "to direct the Trustee with respect to the management of assets of the Plan. . . ."
The situation is somewhat different with respect to the commencement and prosecution of litigation. Section 5(k) provides in relevant part that
No explicit trust provision limits the discretion of the trustee with respect to the exercise of these powers.
On July 6, 2010, plaintiffs' attorney demanded that Fidelity sue E&Y for malpractice. It then brought this action on September 20, 2010.
This motion turns on whether Fidelity had the discretion to sue E&Y on behalf of the Plan and, if so, whether the complaint adequately breached its duty in failing to do so.
ERISA specifically provides that where a "plan expressly provides that the trustee or trustees are subject to the direction of a named fiduciary who is not a trustee . . . the trustees shall be subject to proper directions of such fiduciary which are made in accordance with the terms of the plan and which are not contrary to" ERISA.
In this case, the management of plan assets was expressly committed to the Committee and not to Fidelity.
Plaintiffs respond by pointing to Section 5(k)(vi) of the Trust Agreement, which grants the trustee the power, among many others, "to commence or defend suits or legal or administrative proceedings."
The Trust Agreement in this respect is no better, from Fidelity's point of view, than ambiguous. While it leaves no doubt that the Committee is responsible for the management of Plan assets and that Fidelity is obliged to follow its directions in that regard, as well as protected from liability as long as it does so, that is not the end of the discussion. The Trust Agreement conspicuously fails explicitly to cabin the trustee's authority to bring suit on behalf of the trust. Thus, it reasonably may be argued that the distinction between the trustee's authority with respect to the management of Plan assets and its authority to sue on behalf of the trust reflects a real difference in the extent of its discretion in the two situations.
Where, as here, the governing instrument is reasonably subject to material, differing interpretations, its meaning may not properly be decided on a motion to dismiss the complaint.
The claim that plaintiffs contend the Plan should have brought against E&Y is for professional negligence, i.e., auditor malpractice.
Liability for auditor malpractice requires "either privity of contract between the plaintiff and the defendant or a relationship `so close as to approach that of privity.'"
This "near privity" standard imposes a "heavy burden"
First, the complaint alleges that E&Y audited the Plan only through 2006 whereas the allegedly negligent Lehman audits began in mid-2007.
Second, even if E&Y knew that plaintiffs were entitled to receive copies of Lehman's securities filings, via the SPD or otherwise, that would not be sufficient linking conduct.
Doubtless recognizing the handwriting on the wall, plaintiffs mount a novel argument that the standard for auditor negligence liability adopted by the New York Court of Appeals in Credit Alliance should be liberally construed to permit characterization of the relationship between auditors of public companies and their investors (including participants in benefit plans that invest in their shares) as one of "near privity," thus entitling the investors to sue the company auditors for negligence.
The construction of Credit Alliance that plaintiffs seek effectively would overrule that decision, as the plaintiffs' implicit suggestion that the New York Court of Appeals was ignorant of or did not intend to formulate principles guiding the scope of the liability of auditors of public companies in writing the most important New York auditor liability case since Ultramares is not persuasive. Indeed, the Court of Appeals explicitly rejected essentially the rule for which these plaintiffs contend by expressing its disapproval of "a rule permitting recovery by any foreseeable plaintiff."
In sum, the complaint fails to allege facts which, if true, would demonstrate the existence of a legal duty on the part of E&Y to the Plan or its participants with respect to its audits of Lehman. Plaintiffs therefore have failed to allege facts demonstrating the existence of any viable negligence claim on the part of the Plan against E&Y. Their complaint is insufficient.
For the foregoing reasons, Fidelity's motion to dismiss the complaint as to it [10 Civ. 8631 Dkt. 36] is granted. As this ruling disposes of all claims asserted against Fidelity and it raises an issue peculiar to this defendant, there is no just reason for delay and the Clerk is directed to enter judgment of dismissal as to Fidelity.
SO ORDERED.