“All litigation is inherently a clumsy, time-consuming business.” - Warren E. Burger

ERISA Makes an Interesting Appearance at the 7th Circuit

Posted on May 5th, 2008 by Tim Eavenson | No Comments »
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The Seventh Circuit’s recent decision in Williams v. Interpublic Severance Pay Plan, No. 07-3146 (dec. April 29.2008) seems straightforward enough. It’s an ERISA case. It’s not very sexy.

But buried in there, underneath the actual legal analysis, are a couple of things worth mentioning.

1. Easterbrook Schools the Academics?
Judge Easterbrook focuses the first part of his holding on the use of trust law in analyzing ERISA cases. This seems appropriate, as the Supreme Court instructed as much in Firestone v. Bruch. But critics of the federal courts’ consistent deference to plan administrators’ decisions have been chastising the courts for years, saying they ignore trust law in favor of a rough amalgam of contract, administrative and labor law. And no one epitomizes the anti-deference movement like Yale professor John Langbein, who has written extensively on why he thinks the standard of review under ERISA is out of whack.

So it’s no suprise when Judge Easterbrook supports deference to the plan’s administrator, or when he uses contract law to do it. But when he supports his holding with “See generally John H. Langbein, The Contractarian Basis of the Law of Trusts, 105 Yale L. J. 625 (1995),” call me crazy but that’s more than just a holding. That’s a shot across the bow.

2. ERISA: the Cartoon
“Second, one must not anthropomorphize ‘the administrator.’”

Oh, how many geeky benefits conversations this unfortunate statement could start. What Disney animal would best represent “the administrator?” Would “the administrator” have a high-pitched squeak or a low, dopey voice? How many episodes would it take before “the administrator” would have an anthropomorphically similar character of the opposite gender?

Seriously, though, Easterbrook’s point is that administrator’s are “commonly large organizations” and don’t have any real “interest” in the day-to-day operation of the plan. I know, I know. ZZzzz.

But then, there it was. It might as well have been written in red.

There would be a real conflict of interest if a given administrator put in place a method of linking decisionmakers’ income to the substance of their decisions. A quota system…or some other means of tying the wages or promotion of staff to its disposition of claims could call for non-deferential judicial review.

Really? Somebody must have seen “Sicko“.

3. Please Deliver 9 Copies to: One First Street, Washington D.C.
Easterbrook ends his interest/deference analysis by noting that (what a coincidence!)the whole thing was presently before the Supremes in MetLife v. Glenn, which was argued (again!) six days before Williams was released. Make of that what you will.


SCOTUS: AARP v. EEOC’s ADEA DQ’d

Posted on March 25th, 2008 by Tim Eavenson | No Comments »
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Clearly a statement about the overuse of acronyms, the Supreme Court has denied certiorari in a case between the American Association of Retired Persons and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

The AARP petitioned after the 3th Circuit upheld a Commission rule that employers can offer reduced healthcare to older workers and retirees once they are Medicare-eligible, without violating the ADEA. The Supremes denied the petition Monday.

For it’s part, the AARP was none too pleased. AARP Legislative Policy Director David Certner, via On the Hill:

Beyond blatant age discrimination, the new policy is an ineffective Band-aid for the bigger issue facing American employers and workers: the skyrocketing cost of health care,” Certner says. “By allowing employers to reduce or even eliminate health benefits for retirees when they reach age 65, this rule essentially shifts the costs of all retiree health care on to the backs of older retirees.

“Blatant age discrimination” against retirees? You know who else has trouble finding affordable healthcare? Everyone who is still working. You knew when the boomers got in there they’d start fighting each other. Here’s my legal analysis: not letting employers adjust healthcare rates for the Medicare-eligible makes as much sense as me suing Hooters for discrimination when it rejected my application as a waitress. I mean if. If it rejected my hypothetical application.

Whatever, you get it. Just because something’s not equal doesn’t mean it’s not fair. Incidentally, the rule was promulgated at the insistance of labor groups and other associations, who feared that employers would reduce retiree health benefits across the board if they couldn’t take Medicare eligibility into account.

Still, it’s a funny, fickle Court they’re running out east. Six months ago, it seemed you couldn’t get into the place if you were under 55.


Let’s play catchup…

Posted on March 24th, 2008 by Tim Eavenson | 1 Comment »
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In case you (we) missed it…

The jobs outlook keeps getting worse, the NLRB only has 2 members, TV is slowly coming back (with the right contract), it’s not a great time to be looking for a legal legal job (which is super), and the Supreme Court* decided that 401(k) participants were actually entitled to their money, it doesn’t take much to satisfy the EEOC, and Judge Alex didn’t actually win.

There, now we’re all on the same page. Keep up from now on, huh?

*(For a full[?] list of recent and pending SCOTUS employment law cases, see Ross’ Employment Law Blog here).