Wegmann v. Young Adult Institute, Inc. et al
Filing
166
ORDER: For the foregoing reasons, the Court awards Plaintiff a net annual annuity of $274,339.09, to be paid in monthly installments commencing on January 25, 2022. The Court recognizes that this is a considerable supplemental benefit, particularly given the charitable organization for which Plaintiff worked, and yet it is the agreement these parties made. The claim under which this award is made was brought by Plaintiff pursuant to 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B); a differen t subsection of this provision affords the Court discretion to award attorneys' fees to prevailing parties. See generally 29 U.S.C. § 1132(g)(1) ("In any action under this subchapter (other than an action described in paragraph (2) ) by a participant, beneficiary, or fiduciary, the court in its discretion may allow a reasonable attorney's fee and costs of action to either party."); Hardt v. Reliance Standard Life Ins. Co., 560 U.S. 242, 255 (2010) (permitting fees where the party seeking fees has obtained "some degree of success on the merits"). (See also Am. Compl. paragraph 132(f) (requesting attorneys' fees)). The parties are ORDERED to meet and confer on this issue. If the parties cannot agree on a figure for fees and costs, they are further ORDERED to submit a proposed briefing schedule for the motion on or before March 7, 2020. SO ORDERED. (Signed by Judge Katherine Polk Failla on 2/14/2020) (rro)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
KAREN WEGMANN,
Plaintiff,
-v.YOUNG ADULT INSTITUTE, INC.,
TRUSTEES OF THE SUPPLEMENTAL
PENSION PLAN FOR CERTAIN
MANAGEMENT EMPLOYEES OF
YOUNG ADULT INSTITUTE, INC.,
15 Civ. 3815 (KPF)
ORDER
Defendants.
KATHERINE POLK FAILLA, District Judge:
Familiarity with the extensive procedural history of this case is
presumed. See Wegmann v. Young Adult Inst., Inc., No. 15 Civ. 3815 (KPF),
2016 WL 827780 (S.D.N.Y. Mar. 2, 2016) (granting motion to dismiss
complaint); Wegmann v. Young Adult Inst., Inc., No. 15 Civ. 3815 (KPF), 2016
WL 8711557 (S.D.N.Y. Aug. 5, 2016) (granting motion to stay pending
exhaustion of administrative remedies with respect to Plaintiff’s ERISA claim in
amended complaint); Wegmann v. Young Adult Inst., Inc., No. 15 Civ. 3815
(KPF), 2018 WL 3910820 (S.D.N.Y. Aug. 14, 2018) (denying cross-motions for
summary judgment as to Plaintiff’s ERISA claim; granting Defendants’ motion
for summary judgment as to Plaintiff’s gender discrimination claim). On
May 29, 2019, the Court held a bench trial as to Plaintiff’s remaining claim
under ERISA. On October 31, 2019, the Court issued its Findings of Fact and
Conclusions of Law, determining that Plaintiff was entitled to relief on her
ERISA claim. See Wegmann v. Young Adult Inst., Inc., No. 15 Civ. 3815 (KPF),
2019 WL 5682666 (S.D.N.Y. Oct. 31, 2019). (Dkt. #165). 1
On November 13, 2019, the Court held a hearing to determine the
amount of damages owed to Plaintiff, and it now renders its decision. After
considering the parties’ pre- and post-trial submissions, the evidence developed
at trial, and the parties’ arguments advanced during the damages hearing, the
Court concludes that Plaintiff is entitled to a net annual annuity of
$274,339.09, to be paid in monthly installments commencing on January 25,
2022. 2
DISCUSSION
Defendants introduced into the record a declaration and written report
by their expert witness, actuary Victor Harte. (Harte Decl.). Mr. Harte
submitted two documents, titled Schedule I and Schedule II, in which he
provided the Court with his calculation of the net annual annuity that Plaintiff
would be owed using two different formulas: (i) the formula set forth in the
original 1985 SERP (Schedule II); and (ii) the formula set forth in the 2008
Amendment to the SERP (Schedule I). During the damages hearing, the parties
1
The Court assumes familiarity with its Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law and
adopts the same naming conventions contained therein. (Dkt. #165).
2
The Court provided the parties an opportunity to have this specific matter remanded to
the Plan Administrator, so that it could determine whether Plaintiff was entitled to
ERISA benefits and, if so, the amount of benefits owed. The parties declined this
opportunity and stated that they preferred for the Court to conduct further proceedings.
(Dkt. #129, 134). Later, after the damages hearing, the Court provided the parties a
period of time in which to submit supplemental briefing concerning the amount of
benefits owed to Plaintiff. The parties elected not to file any supplemental papers.
2
made clear that they generally accepted the accuracy of Mr. Harte’s damages
calculations, but disagreed on three key issues:
(i)
What types of compensation and benefits that Plaintiff
received while working at YAI should be included in her
“total annual earnings,” as the term appears in the 1985
SERP and the 2008 Amendment to the SERP (Def. Ex. A
at 382-83; Def. Ex. AT at 425-26);
(ii)
Whether, under the 2008 Amendment, Plaintiff’s
annual annuity before offset should be limited to her
accrued benefit before June 30, 2008, or 65% of her
highest annual earnings (Def. Ex. AT at 426); and
(iii)
Whether the formula provided in the 1985 SERP or the
2008 Amendment should be used to calculate Plaintiff’s
benefit.
(November 13, 2019 Hearing Tr. 30; Trial Tr. 34:11-18). The Court resolves
each of these disputes in turn.
1.
Plaintiff’s “Total Annual Earnings” Figure Differs Under the
1985 SERP and the 2008 Amendment
While employed by YAI, Plaintiff received compensation and other
benefits in the forms of: (i) regular pay; (ii) a longevity bonus; (iii) a car
allowance; (iv) long-term disability; (v) a bonus from YAI; and (vi) a bonus from
an entity called the New York League of Early Learning (the “NYL”). (Pl. FFCL
¶ 79). As explained below, the answer to the question of which of these
payments are included in Plaintiff’s “total annual earnings” figure for SERP
purposes differs depending upon whether one considers the 1985 SERP or its
2008 Amendment.
The Court begins with the 1985 SERP, which does not provide a
definition for the phrase “total annual earnings.” (Def. Ex. A at 382-83). And,
3
as it happens, there is little evidence in the record to aid the Court in
determining the proper definition. Defendants have offered the Court:
(i)
Mr. Harte’s expert testimony that “total annual
earnings” means salary and regular bonus (but not
longevity bonus).
(Trial Tr. 228:18-229:3, 230:3231:15, 241:18-242:18);
(ii)
The testimony of former YAI Board of Trustees Chair
Marcella Fava that the Board considered “total annual
earnings” to consist solely of a participant’s salary and
YAI bonus (Fava Decl. ¶ 19); and
(iii)
Documents that indicate that the Board believed “total
annual earnings” to include salary and bonus paid by
YAI (Def. Ex. I at 403; Def. Ex. F at 3074).
This evidence, which suggests that Plaintiff’s total annual earnings is limited to
her salary and YAI bonus, is further supported by the dictionary definition of
“earnings”: “Revenue gained from labor or services, from the investment of
capital, or from assets.” Earnings, BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (11th ed. 2019). 3
This definition suggests that “earnings” should include only payments related
to labor, and not supplemental benefits, like car allowances. Plaintiff, for her
part, has introduced no evidence, aside from her own testimony, in which she
opined that “total annual earnings,” as the phrase appears in the 1985 SERP,
should include her longevity bonus, car allowance, long-term disability, and
bonus received from the NYL. On this record, the Court finds that “total
3
See Textron Lycoming Reciprocating Engine Div., Avco Corp. v. United Auto., Aerospace,
Agric. Implement Workers of Am., Int’l Union, 523 U.S. 653, 656 (1998) (using dictionary
definition to determine meaning of word “for” in federal question case); Nasdaq, Inc. v.
Exch. Traded Managers Grp., LLC, No. 17 Civ. 8252 (PAE), 2019 WL 6977393, at *36
(S.D.N.Y. Dec. 20, 2019) (“Words and phrases are to be given their plain and ordinary
meaning, and New York courts will commonly refer to dictionary definitions in order to
determine that meaning.” (quoting Summit Health, Inc. v. APS Healthcare Bethesda, Inc.,
993 F. Supp. 2d 379, 390 (S.D.N.Y. 2014)).
4
annual earnings” under the 1985 SERP is limited to Plaintiff’s salary and YAI
bonus.
The 2008 Amendment, in contrast, expressly provides that “Total Annual
Earnings shall include all cash compensation (salary plus bonuses) paid
through any agency affiliated with the YAI National Institute for People with
Disabilities Network, excluding the bonuses denominated ‘YAI Bonus II’ and
‘YAI Interest Bonus.’” (Def. Ex. AT at 426). The calculation of Plaintiff’s “total
annual earnings” under this definition is correspondingly different: Plaintiff’s
regular pay and YAI bonus are plainly included, while her car allowance and
long-term disability payments, which are neither salaries nor bonuses, are
plainly not. Whether Plaintiff’s “total annual earnings” includes her longevity
bonus and her bonus received from the NYL requires additional discussion.
The Court concludes that Plaintiff’s longevity bonus should be included.
Because it employs the plural version of the word “bonus,” the 2008
Amendment clearly contemplates that multiple bonuses received by a SERP
participant may be counted. More importantly, the amendment clarifies that
all bonuses paid through YAI should be included, which would encompass the
longevity bonus.
Conversely, the Court concludes that the NYL bonus should not be
included. This bonus could be counted only if the NYL were “affiliated” with
YAI. (Def. Ex. AT at 426). And the parties have provided scant evidence
concerning whether the NYL was in fact an affiliate of YAI. Plaintiff believed
that the NYL was an affiliate of YAI, because the two were joined by
5
management agreements. (Trial Tr. 52:23-54:11). But Plaintiff admitted that
YAI had no ownership interest in the NYL. (Id.). In light of the limited evidence
at hand, the Court again looks to the dictionary, which defines affiliate as “[a]
corporation that that is related to another corporation by shareholdings or
other means of control; a subsidiary, parent, or sibling corporation,” or
“[s]omeone who controls, is controlled by, or is under common control with an
issuer of a security.” Affiliate, BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (11th ed. 2019). (See
also Def. FFCL ¶¶ 289-91). Because the record does not demonstrate that YAI
has an ownership interest in the NYL (or the converse), the Court cannot
conclude that the two organizations are affiliated as the 2008 Amendment
requires. Thus, the bonus Plaintiff received from the NYL will not be included
in her total annual earnings figure as defined by the 2008 Amendment.
The Court must next determine in which year Plaintiff had her highest
“total annual earnings,” under either definition of the term. On the record
before it, the Court concludes that Plaintiff realized the highest total annual
earnings under the 1985 SERP, when she received: (i) $270,885.53 in regular
pay; and (ii) $46,261.04 in YAI bonus. (Pl. FFCL. ¶ 79; Harte Decl. Schedule
IV). 4 Plaintiff also realized the highest total annual earnings under the 2008
4
During the damages hearing, the Court suggested to the parties that one reading of
Section 7.1 of the 1985 SERP would require the Court to limit Plaintiff’s highest total
annual earnings under the 1985 SERP to payments she received before June 30, 2007,
the date immediately prior to the effective date of the 2008 Amendment. (See generally
Nov. 13, 2019 Hearing Tr.; Def. Ex. A at 372). By this logic, all inputs to the formula
provided in the 1985 SERP would assume that Plaintiff had been terminated on
June 30, 2007. (Id.). The parties agreed, however, that the Court should consider
Plaintiff’s full career at YAI, including the payments she received from YAI until her
resignation on June 30, 2014, when performing calculations under the 1985 SERP’s
6
Amendment in the year 2009, when she received: (i) $270,885.53 in regular
pay; (ii) $46,261.04 in YAI bonus; and (iii) $73,817.89 in longevity bonus. (Id.).
Thus, Plaintiff’s highest total annual earnings under the 1985 SERP is
$317,146.57, and Plaintiff’s highest total annual earnings under the 2008
Amendment is $390,964.46.
2.
The 2008 Amendment Does Not Limit Plaintiff’s Annual
Annuity Before Offset to the Greater of Her Accrued Benefit
Before June 30, 2008, or 65% of Her Highest Annual Earnings
In addition to modifying the 1985 SERP’s formula for calculating
benefits, the 2008 Amendment expressly limited certain specified individuals’
annual annuity before offset to the greater of: (i) their accrued benefit before
June 30, 2008; or (ii) 65% of their highest annual earnings. (Def. Ex. AT at
426). Defendants argue that these limitations should apply to Plaintiff as well,
notwithstanding the fact she is not one of the individuals the 2008 Amendment
identifies as being affected by them. (Nov. 13, 2019 Hearing Tr. 23:12-22,
27:12-28:3). Defendants’ argument is premised on the fact that, at the time
the 2008 Amendment was adopted, the Board did not know that Plaintiff was a
participant in the SERP and thus did not believe her benefits needed to be
limited. (Id.). The Court is unmoved by Defendants’ arguments. “[A]s
administrator of the SERP, the Board of YAI can fairly have been expected to
understand the plain meaning of the document itself.” (Dkt. #165 at 40).
Thus, the Board has no excuse for not knowing that Plaintiff was a participant
formula. The Court will not disturb the parties’ stipulation and performs the
calculations herein accordingly.
7
in the SERP at the time of the 2008 Amendment. Further, in drafting the 2008
Amendment, the Board could have chosen to apply the limitations to all SERP
participants, rather than to specific individuals. They failed to do so. Even if
the Board’s failure to list Plaintiff were the result of an honest mistake, the
meaning of the 2008 Amendment is plain. Because the 2008 Amendment does
not limit Plaintiff’s annual annuity before offset to the greater of her accrued
benefit before June 30, 2008, or 65% of her highest annual earnings, the Court
will not do so either.
3.
The Formula Specified in the 2008 Amendment Will Be Used
to Calculate Plaintiff’s Benefits
Plaintiff argues that the Court must use the formula set forth in the 1985
Amendment, because the 2008 Amendment cannot apply to Plaintiff. (Nov. 13,
2019 Hearing Tr. at 31:4-32:7). Plaintiff bases this argument on the fact that
the preamble to the amendment states that it will “document the imposition of
certain Plan accrual limitations as agreed under employment agreements
between the Institute, and, respectively, Joel M. Levy and Philip H. Levy, and to
make certain other changes.” (Def. Ex. AT at 417). Plaintiff claims that,
because there is no evidence that limitations concerning Plaintiff’s accrual were
agreed to in any of the relevant employment agreements, the Amendment does
not contemplate imposing any changes upon Plaintiff’s SERP benefits. (Nov.
13, 2019 Hearing Tr. at 31:4-32:7).
But Plaintiff misunderstands the limiting effect of the preamble to the
2008 Amendment. The sentence in question countenances the imposition of
changes to the SERP that were agreed to in the employment agreements in
8
addition to “certain other changes.” (Def. Ex. AT at 417). Thus, the fact that
changes regarding Plaintiff’s benefits were not agreed to in the employment
agreements does not mean that the 2008 Amendment cannot apply to Plaintiff.
After careful consideration of the record, the Court concludes that the
2008 Amendment may apply to Plaintiff, but only if it would not leave Plaintiff
with a lesser benefit than she would have received before the 2008 Amendment
was adopted. The Court’s understanding is derived from Section 7.1 of the
1985 SERP, which gives YAI the right to amend the SERP at any time, provided
that:
[N]o amendment shall have the effect of: (i) directly or
indirectly divesting the interest of any Plan participant
in any amount that he or she would have removed had
he terminated his employment with the Institute
immediately prior to the effective date of such
amendment, or the interest of any beneficiary of such
participant as such interest existed prior to the effective
date of such amendment[.]
(Def. Ex. A at 372). Accordingly, the formula provided by the 2008 Amendment
can be binding upon Plaintiff only if it would not divest her of any interest in
the SERP and would instead provide her with additional value. The Court
must thus conduct two calculations, one using the formula provided in the
1985 SERP and one using the formula provided in the 2008 Amendment. The
calculation that provides Plaintiff with the greater benefit is the one to which
she is entitled.
To review, the Court (i) has determined Plaintiff’s highest total annual
earnings under both the 1985 SERP and the 2008 Amendment and (ii) has
concluded that Plaintiff’s 2008 Amendment does not limit Plaintiff’s annual
9
annuity before offset to the greater of her accrued benefit before June 30, 2008,
or 65% of her highest annual earnings. The parties have otherwise stipulated
to the accuracy of Mr. Harte’s proposed inputs and calculations. Therefore, the
Court relies on the calculations provided by Mr. Harte in Schedules I and II,
modifying them only to reflect the Court’s decisions regarding Plaintiff’s total
annual earnings and the lack of a limitation on Plaintiff’s annual annuity
before offset. Under the 1985 SERP, Plaintiff would be entitled to a net annual
annuity of $224,787.55, which, the Court observes, matches the figure in Mr.
Harte’s schedule. (Harte Decl. Schedule II). Under the 2008 Amendment,
Plaintiff would be entitled to a net annual annuity of $274,339.09. (See Harte
Decl. Schedule I). Thus, Plaintiff would be entitled to a greater benefit under
the 2008 Amendment. For this reason, the 2008 Amendment will apply to
Plaintiff.
Plaintiff is awarded damages in the form of a net annual annuity of
$274,339.09, to be paid in monthly installments (see Def. Ex. A. at 381; Def.
Ex. AT at 424), commencing on Plaintiff’s sixty-fifth birthday, on January 25,
2022. (Trial Tr. 89:3-8).
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the Court awards Plaintiff a net annual
annuity of $274,339.09, to be paid in monthly installments commencing on
January 25, 2022. The Court recognizes that this is a considerable
supplemental benefit, particularly given the charitable organization for which
Plaintiff worked, and yet it is the agreement these parties made.
10
The claim under which this award is made was brought by Plaintiff
pursuant to 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B); a different subsection of this provision
affords the Court discretion to award attorneys’ fees to prevailing parties. See
generally 29 U.S.C. § 1132(g)(1) (“In any action under this subchapter (other
than an action described in paragraph (2)) by a participant, beneficiary, or
fiduciary, the court in its discretion may allow a reasonable attorney’s fee and
costs of action to either party.”); Hardt v. Reliance Standard Life Ins. Co., 560
U.S. 242, 255 (2010) (permitting fees where the party seeking fees has obtained
“some degree of success on the merits”). (See also Am. Compl. ¶ 132(f)
(requesting attorneys’ fees)). The parties are ORDERED to meet and confer on
this issue. If the parties cannot agree on a figure for fees and costs, they are
further ORDERED to submit a proposed briefing schedule for the motion on or
before March 7, 2020.
SO ORDERED.
Dated: February 14, 2020
New York, New York
KATHERINE POLK FAILLA
United States District Judge
11
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