Participants not Due Additional Benefits Based on Defective SPD
January 29, 2010 (PLANSPONSOR.com) – A federal court has ruled that cash
balance plan participants are not due additional benefits because a Summary
Plan Description (SPD) failed to inform them of an offset to their benefits
calculation.
The U.S. District Court for the Central District of
California said the two former participants in the Northrop Grumman cash
balance plan did not prove that they relied on the defective SPD for their
expectation of benefits. The district court pointed out that even though the 9th
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals agreed that the SPD the plaintiffs received did
not inform them of the offset, the appellate court did not rule for the
plaintiffs but instead sent the case back to the district court with
instructions to examine plaintiffs’ "expectations."
The plaintiffs' argument that they remained employed at
Northrop longer than they otherwise would have is insufficient to demonstrate
reasonable reliance, according to the court's opinion. Both men were informed
via letters and a meeting with a staff member of the Northrop Benefits Center.
The plaintiffs were employed at Litton Industries, Inc.
when it was acquired by Northrop, and they participated in the Litton's
Retirement Plan B. Northrop decided to consolidate all pension plans it had
inherited through acquisitions into a single cash balance plan, effective July
1, 2003. It sent an SPD to participants at that time.
The court pointed out that the SPD included a caveat that
it was only a summary and that participants should refer to the master plan
document for more information. In addition, Northrop held Town Hall meetings in
which the benefits calculations, including the offset, were discussed, and
participants had received a summary of material modifications which described
benefits calculations, including the offset.
The case is Skinner
v. Northrop Grumman Retirement Plan B, C.D. Cal., No. CV 07-3923-JFW (JTLx), 1/26/10.
Rebecca Moore
editors@plansponsor.com