IMHO:The "Burden" of Proof
Recently, the 7th Circuit responded to requests that
it reconsider its opinion in the revenue-sharing/"excessive
fee" case of Hecker v. Deere. The case, of course, was one of
the earliest in the litany of those cases to be filed in
2006, and the only one (thus far) to reach the appellate
level.
Recently, the 7th Circuit responded to requests that it
reconsider its opinion in the
revenue-sharing/"excessive fee" case of Hecker v.
Deere (see
"Limit 'Ed").
The case, of course, was one of the earliest in the litany
of those cases to be filed in 2006, and the only one (thus
far) to reach the appellate level.
To date, the courts have, with little exception,
dispensed with these cases harshly. Not that they
aren't entitled to do so, of course, and not that this
particular generation of filings isn't deserving of
such treatment, IMHO. From the beginning, the plans
targeted seemed better-designed to fill the pockets of
plaintiffs' counsel, if for no other reason than large
employers frequently figure that it's cheaper to settle
than to fight. That said, the courts—including the 7th
Circuit—seem to have a more "generous" view of
what it takes to earn the protections of ERISA 404(c) than
most ERISA lawyers I know.
I was no less confused by the 7th Circuit's response to
the request for a rehearing. Basically, the court said that
there had been no judicial call for such reconsideration,
and that, in fact, the judges who made the original
determination had voted to deny the petition for
reconsideration. However, the judges apparently felt the
need to respond directly to some of the charges made in the
amicus curiae briefs filed in support of the motion—and,
perhaps more significantly, it took pains to point out that
its ruling in the case, and on the facts presented,
shouldn't be applied too broadly. That, of course, seems to
have been a source of solace and comfort to the folks who
have brought us these revenue-sharing lawsuits, who have
reason to feel "down" (based on the limited adjudications
to date), but are apparently not "out."
Now, I didn't mind that the courts have held there is no
fiduciary duty to disclose fees to participants (there
isn't), nor the determination that plan sponsors need not
scour the marketplace to find the cheapest investment
choices (cheapest might not even be "reasonable"). However,
having spent some reasonable part of my adult life trying
to understand and help others understand the scope,
implications of, and limitations to ERISA 404(c), I've
generally been puzzled at how liberally the courts have
been willing to apply its protections, certainly in
contrast to the Âposition espoused by the Department of
Labor (which, I should add, has been remarkably consistent
in its voice on the subject).
I, for one, would have been perfectly content if the
court had held that it wasn't sufficient to establish a
fiduciary breach claim by just stating that the plan
offered retail-priced mutual funds (even from a single fund
family), particularly when they were offered alongside a
brokerage window that provided participants access to
investments beyond that core menu. One can argue that a
plan the size of Deere's could have negotiated a better
deal for its participants, or that it perhaps would have
been better-served to offer a more diversified menu than a
single set of proprietary funds—but I think the court would
have been comfortably within its purview to say that you
need more than a simple insinuation that that arrangement
is a violation on its face to bring a case in federal
court.
What puzzled me then—and puzzles me still—is that the
court apparently felt it necessary to invoke the safe
harbor protections of ERISA 404(c) to, effectively, justify
its conclusion. For, while there are any number of casual
401(k) plan adviser/consultants out there who will tell
plan sponsors that all they have to do to earn those
protections is to offer a lot of funds, let participants
transfer between those funds at least quarterly, give those
participants prospectuses on those funds—oh, and file their
intent to function as a 404(c) plan; there's more to it
than that, and we trust that the courts are as aware of
that as any ERISA prudent expert.
Personally, I would have preferred that the 7th Circuit
restate its rationale—and clarify that, while they chose to
invoke 404(c), it wasn't necessary to do so; clarify that
the plaintiffs simply hadn't established a case sufficient
to go to trial; and, in the process, reminded us all that,
while the standards ERISA fiduciaries are held to are
demanding, so are the standards for asserting that that
duty hasn't been fulfilled.
Nevin E. Adams
editors@plansponsor.com