Gedek v. Perez et al
Filing
75
ORDER denying defendants'(54) Motion to Dismiss for Failure to State a Claim; denying defendants' (56) Motion to Dismiss in case 6:12-cv-06051-DGL. Signed by Hon. David G. Larimer on 12/17/14. (EMA) (Main Document 75 replaced on 12/17/2014) (JHF).
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
WESTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
_______________________________________________
MARK GEDEK, individually and on behalf of all others
similarly situated,
Plaintiff,
DECISION AND ORDER
12-CV-6051L
v.
ANTONIO M. PEREZ, et al.,
Defendants.
________________________________________________
THOMAS W. GREENWOOD, individually and on
behalf of all others similarly situated,
Plaintiff,
v.
12-CV-6056L
ANTONIO M. PEREZ, et al.,
Defendants.
_________________________________________________
BARRY BOLGER, individually and on behalf of
all others similarly situated,
Plaintiff,
v.
ANTONIO M. PEREZ, et al.,
Defendants.
__________________________________________________
12-CV-6067L
_________________________________________________
JULIUS COLETTA, individually and on behalf of
all others similarly situated,
Plaintiff,
v.
12-CV-6071L
ANTONIO M. PEREZ, et al.,
Defendants.
____________________________________________________
ANDREW J. MAUER, on behalf of himself, the
Eastman Kodak Employees’ Savings and
Investment Plan and a class of persons similarly situated,
Plaintiff,
v.
12-CV-6078L
THE EASTMAN KODAK SAVINGS AND INVESTMENT
PLAN COMMITTEE, et al.,
Defendants.
____________________________________________________
Plaintiffs DALE TOAL and CLAUDE MATTE,
individually and on behalf of all others similarly situated,
Plaintiffs,
v.
12-CV-6080L
ANTONIO PEREZ, et al.,
Defendants.
_____________________________________________________
ALLEN E. HARTTER, individually and on behalf of all others
similarly situated,
Plaintiff,
v.
ANTONIO PEREZ, et al.,
Defendants.
_____________________________________________________
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12-CV-6146L
INTRODUCTION
These seven cases, which have been consolidated for all purposes under Rule 42(a) of the
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, have been brought by participants and beneficiaries of the Savings
and Investment Plan (“SIP”) of Eastman Kodak Company (“Kodak”) and the Eastman Kodak Stock
Ownership Plan (“ESOP”) (collectively “the Plans”), against the administrators and fiduciaries of the
Plans.
Plaintiffs allege that the Plans are subject to the Employee Retirement Income Security Act
(“ERISA”), 29 U.S.C. § 1001 et seq., and that defendants have violated ERISA by failing to
prudently manage the Plans’ assets. Plaintiffs allege that defendants have done so principally by
continuing to invest those assets in Kodak stock even after it became obvious that Kodak was headed
for bankruptcy and that its stock was going to plummet in value.
The actions have been brought as a Rule 23 class action, with a proposed class consisting of
all participants in the Plans for whose individual accounts the Plans invested primarily in Kodak stock
at any time from January 1, 2010 through and including the date of liquidation of the Plans (“the class
period”). Consolidated Complaint (Dkt. #48) ¶ 41.1
Two sets of defendants have appeared in this action. The “Kodak defendants” include the
Kodak Savings and Investment Plan Committee (“SIPCO”) and the Kodak Stock Ownership Plan
Committee (“SOPCO”), which are the plan administrators for the SIP and ESOP, respectively, as
well as various individuals who held positions on those committees during the class period. The other
defendant, BNY Mellon Financial Corporation (“Mellon”) is the successor in interest to Boston Safe
Deposit and Trust (“Boston”), which was the trustee of the SIP during the class period.2
1
The complaint does not appear to allege any specific end date for the class period. It
does allege that Kodak announced in February 2012 that it was discontinuing the ESOP. Dkt.
#48 ¶ 201.
2
The complaint also names as a defendant T. Rowe Price Trust Company (“T. Rowe
Price”), as the trustee of ESOP, Dkt. #48 ¶ 39, but T. Rowe Price has never been served or
appeared in this action.
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Both the Kodak defendants and Mellon have moved to dismiss the claims against them
pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. For the reasons that follow, the
motions are denied.
BACKGROUND
The facts as alleged in the complaint, the truth of which is accepted for purposes of the
motions to dismiss, are as follows. At all times relevant to the complaint, the Plans were employee
benefit plans within the meaning of ERISA; see 29 U.S.C. §§ 1002(2)(A), 1002(3).
Both the SIP and ESOP are defined-contribution plans under ERISA. Each participant has
an individual account, and the participant’s benefits are based on the amount that the participant
contributes to his or her account, as increased or diminished by the performance of the investments
selected for that account.3 Thus, both the SIP and ESOP qualify as “eligible individual account plans”
(“EIAPs”) under 29 U.S.C. § 1107(d)(3)(A).4
The ESOP is funded entirely by Kodak. The plan document states that “[n]o participant shall
be required or permitted to make contributions to the Plan or Trust.” ESOP Doc. (Dkt. #74-2)
3
Under ERISA, the term “defined contribution plan”
means a pension plan which provides for an individual account for each participant and for
benefits based solely upon the amount contributed to the participant’s account, and any
income, expenses, gains and losses, and any forfeitures of accounts of other participants
which may be allocated to such participant’s account.
29 U.S.C. § 1002(34).
4
The term “eligible individual account plan” means
an individual account plan which is (i) a profit-sharing, stock bonus, thrift, or savings plan;
(ii) an employee stock ownership plan; or (iii) a money purchase plan which was in
existence on September 2, 1974, and which on such date invested primarily in qualifying
employer securities. Such term excludes an individual retirement account or annuity
described in section 408 of Title 26.
29 U.S.C. § 1107(d)(3)(A).
-4-
§ 5.01(d). Virtually all Kodak employees are eligible to participate in the ESOP. Id.§ 4.01. The
ESOP is administered by SOPCO, which consists of Kodak’s chief financial officer (“CFO”), general
counsel, director of human resources, treasurer, and director of “Worldwide Total Compensation.”
Id. § 2.36.
The ESOP plan document states that the purpose of the ESOP is
to enable eligible Employees of Eastman Kodak Company and certain Affiliated Companies
to share in the future of the Company, to provide Employees with an opportunity to
accumulate capital for their future economic security, and to enable Employees to acquire
stock ownership interests in Eastman Kodak Company. Consequently, Company
contributions to the Plan will be invested primarily in Employer Securities.
Id. § 1.02. The document goes on to state that “[t]he Plan is also designed to provide a method of
corporate finance to the Company ... .” Id.
Once a participant has reached age 55 and has completed at least ten years of service, the
participant may choose to take some of his account in cash. Id. §§ 9.01, 9.02. While the participant
could, on his own, reinvest that cash elsewhere, the participant cannot reallocate his ESOP account
itself into a different fund or into different investments. Rather, the ESOP document states that “[t]he
Trust Fund [i.e., the plan assets] will be invested primarily in Employer Securities,” that “[a]ll
investments ... will be made by the Trustee only upon the direction of SOPCO,” and that “SOPCO
may direct that the entire Trust Fund assets be invested and held in Employer Securities.” Kodak’s
Motion (Dkt. #56) Ex. B, § 6.01. The trustee does have some limited discretion, however, to “invest
the Trust Fund in savings accounts, certificates of deposit, high-grade short-term securities, equity
stock, bonds or other investments desirable for the Trust,” and the plan document further states that
“the Trust Fund may be held in cash.” Id.
The SIP is administered by SIPCO, which consists of the same individuals as SOPCO. As
stated, during the class period, Mellon’s predecessor in interest, Boston, was the SIP trustee.
The SIP is partially funded by the participants themselves. The SIP plan document states that
one purpose of the SIP is to give Kodak employees an opportunity to defer some of their pre-tax
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wages. Dkt. #56-2 Ex. A § 1.01. At least some participants are also eligible to receive matching
funds from Kodak on such deferred amounts. See id. and § 5.02.
The plan document states that the SIP is also intended to “offer Participants the opportunity
to invest in Employer Securities,” i.e., shares of Kodak common stock. Id. §§ 1.01, 2.16. It further
states that “Participants may, but need not, invest some or all of their Plan Account balances in the
Kodak Stock Fund.” Id. The Kodak Stock Fund is “an employee stock ownership plan component”
of the SIP that “consists primarily of Employer Securities ... .” Id. §§ 1.01, 7.01(b)(1). The SIP
document expressly provides that “the Kodak Stock Fund must be made available for investment,”
but that “no Participant or beneficiary is required to invest in the Kodak Stock Fund,” and that “a
range of [other] investment alternatives” must be maintained at all times. Id. § 7.01(c) and (b)(2).
The factual allegations of the consolidated complaint are lengthy, but the gist of plaintiffs’
claims is fairly straightforward. According to plaintiffs, throughout the class period, defendants knew
or should have known that Kodak’s financial condition was poor, that its long-term prospects were
not good, and that as a result, its stock price was going to continue to decline, which it in fact did.
By the end of the class period, Kodak stock was trading for a small fraction of its earlier levels.
Eventually, on January 19, 2012, Kodak filed for bankruptcy protection under Chapter 11. In short,
then, plaintiffs allege that it was imprudent of defendants to continue to permit the Plans to offer
Kodak funds to participants, or to continue to purchase or hold Kodak stock. As a result of that
alleged imprudence, the Plans, and the participants, suffered losses.
Count I of the complaint alleges that defendants (other than T. Rowe Price and SOPCO)
failed to prudentially manage the SIP and its assets, in violation of their fiduciary duties under ERISA,
and that defendants are therefore liable to restore the losses to the Plans caused by those breaches,
pursuant to 29 U.S.C. §§ 1109, 1132(a)(2), and 1132(a)(3). Count II alleges a similar claim as to
the ESOP, against all defendants other than SIPCO, Boston and Mellon. Count III asserts a claim
of co-fiduciary liability against all defendants. Plaintiffs seek a monetary payment to the Plans to
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make good the losses they suffered due to defendants’ breaches, unspecified injunctive relief, and
attorney’s fees.
DISCUSSION
I. Kodak Defendants
As the Second Circuit has stated, “ERISA’s central purpose is to protect beneficiaries of
employee benefits plans. In pursuit of this goal, ERISA imposes a ‘prudent man standard of care’
on fiduciaries entrusted with the administration of these plans.” St. Vincent Catholic Medical Centers
Retirement Plan v. Morgan Stanley Inv. Mgmt. Inc., 712 F.3d 705, 715 (2d Cir. 2013) (additional
internal quote omitted).
That standard is set forth in 29 U.S.C. § 1104. That section provides, inter alia, that in
general, “a fiduciary shall discharge his duties ... with the care, skill, prudence, and diligence under
the circumstances then prevailing that a prudent man acting in a like capacity and familiar with such
matters would use in the conduct of an enterprise of a like character and with like aims[, including]
by diversifying the investments of the plan so as to minimize the risk of large losses, unless under the
circumstances it is clearly prudent not to do so ... .” 29 U.S.C. § 1104(a)(1). That section goes on
to provide, however, that “in the case of an eligible individual account plan ..., the diversification
requirement ... and the prudence requirement (only to the extent that it requires diversification) ...
is [sic] not violated by acquisition or holding of qualifying employer real property or qualifying
employer securities ... .” Id.
The prudent-man standard, and the general diversification requirements, have given rise in
recent years to a spate of cases alleging imprudence based on plans’ investments in employer stock;
see White v. Marshall & Ilsley Corp., 714 F.3d 980, 981 (7th Cir. 2013) (“This case is one in a series
alleging that fiduciaries of employee retirement savings plans acted imprudently by allowing
employees to choose to buy and hold an employer’s stock while it declined significantly in price”)
(citing cases).
-7-
Such cases have met with mixed results, however. That is not surprising, since the standard
of proof is high. It is not enough to show that a fiduciary’s investment decisions turned out badly;
to prevail, a plaintiff must show that those decisions were objectively imprudent at the time they were
made. See St. Vincent, 712 F.3d at 716 (“ERISA’s fiduciary duty of care requires prudence, not
prescience”) (internal quote and alteration omitted); In re Citigroup ERISA Litig., 662 F.3d 128, 140
(2d Cir. 2011) (“The test of prudence is ... one of conduct rather than results”), cert. denied, 133
S.Ct. 475 (2012).
With respect to investments in employer stock, several courts of appeals, including the Second
Circuit, had until recently adopted what has come to be known as “the Moench presumption,” which
is a presumption of compliance with ERISA when a fiduciary invests assets in the employer’s stock.
See Moench v. Robertson, 62 F.3d 553, 571 (3d Cir. 1995); Citigroup, 662 F.3d at 138 (adopting
Moench presumption). Under the Moench presumption, “a fiduciary’s decision to invest an
employer’s retirement plan in the employer’s own stock–or to offer plan participants the option to
so invest–is a presumptively prudent decision in compliance with ERISA, and thus the decision to
invest in the employer’s stock is reviewed only for an abuse of discretion.” Taveras v. UBS AG, 708
F.3d 436, 443 (2d Cir. 2013). The Second Circuit has also held that “a fiduciary’s failure to divest
from company stock is less likely to constitute an abuse of discretion if the plan’s terms require–rather
than merely permit–investment in company stock.” Citigroup, 662 F.3d at 138.
Earlier this year, however, the United States Supreme Court changed the legal landscape. In
Fifth Third Bancorp v. Dudenhoeffer, ___ U.S. ___, 134 S.Ct. 2459 (2014), the Supreme Court
rejected the Moench presumption, and held that “the law does not create a special presumption
favoring ESOP fiduciaries. Rather, the same standard of prudence applies to all ERISA fiduciaries,
including ESOP fiduciaries, except that an ESOP fiduciary is under no duty to diversify the ESOP’s
holdings.” Id. at 2467. In other words, whereas ERISA places a general duty on plan fiduciaries to
“diversify[] the investments of the plan so as to minimize the risk of large losses, unless under the
circumstances it is clearly prudent not to do so,” 29 U.S.C. § 1104(a)(1)(C), “an ESOP fiduciary is
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exempt from § 1104(a)(1)(C)’s diversification requirement and also from § 1104(a)(1)(B)’s duty of
prudence, but ‘only to the extent that it requires diversification.’” Id. (quoting 29 U.S.C.
§ 1104(a)(2)) (alteration in original). Otherwise, the general duty of prudence applies.
The Court in Dudenhoeffer went on to “consider more fully one important mechanism for
weeding out meritless claims, the motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim.” Id. at 2471.
Applying the now-familiar “plausibility” standard of Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 556 U.S. 662 (2009), and Bell
Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544 (2007), the Court held that “where a stock is publicly
traded, allegations that a fiduciary should have recognized from publicly available information alone
that the market was over- or undervaluing the stock are implausible as a general rule, at least in the
absence of special circumstances.” 134 S.Ct. at 2471. “In other words, a fiduciary usually ‘is not
imprudent to assume that a major stock market ... provides the best estimate of the value of the
stocks traded on it that is available to him.’” Id. (quoting Summers v. State Street Bank & Trust Co.,
453 F.3d 404, 408 (7th Cir. 2006)).
The Supreme Court did not state what might constitute “a special circumstance affecting the
reliability of the market price ... that would make reliance on the market’s valuation imprudent.” Id.
at 2472. The Court simply held that because “[t]he Court of Appeals did not point to any special
circumstance rendering reliance on the market price imprudent[, t]he court’s decision to deny
dismissal ... appears to have been based on an erroneous understanding of the prudence of relying on
market prices” as a measure of a stock’s “true” value. Id.5 Nor did the Court address the situation
presented by the plaintiffs’ factual allegations here, i.e., allegations that a company’s downward path
was so obvious and unstoppable that, regardless of whether the market was “correctly” valuing the
stock, the fiduciaries should have halted or disallowed further investment in it.
5
The Court also held that to the extent that the lower court’s reversal of the district
court’s dismissal of the complaint was based on the theory that the duty of prudence required the
fiduciary to sell the ESOP’s holdings of employer stock, based on inside information, that reversal
was erroneous, since “ERISA’s duty of prudence cannot require an ESOP fiduciary to perform an
action–such as divesting the fund’s holdings of the employer’s stock on the basis of inside
information–that would violate the securities laws.” 134 S.Ct. at 2472. The instant case does not
involve any allegations concerning inside information, however.
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In assessing the effect of Dudenhoeffer on the case at bar, it is important to consider that the
facts there were considerably different from those here. In Dudenhoeffer, the allegation was that the
fiduciaries knew or should have known that the company’s stock was overvalued. The plaintiffs there
alleged that publicly available information had provided ample warning signs that subprime lending,
which formed a large part of the company’s business, was excessively risky, because the housing
market was headed for collapse and many subprime borrowers would soon become unable to pay off
their mortgages.
In contrast, plaintiffs in the case at bar allege that
[d]efendants knew or should have known that Kodak stock was an imprudent investment for
the Plans because the Company: (a) depended on a dying technology and the sale of
antiquated products no longer sought by the consumer; (b) was unable to bring new products
to the market to counter the rapidly declining profits from the sales of its antiquated products;
(c) was unable to generate sufficient cash-flow from its short term business strategy of
initiating lawsuits, which would presumably garner settlements, to maintain the Company’s
cash flow; (d) was suffering from a severe lack of liquidity; and (3) its stock price collapsed
because of the above dire circumstances.
Amended Complaint (Dkt. #48) ¶ 100.
Plaintiffs do not allege, then, that Kodak stock was overvalued, and that the metaphorical
bubble was about to burst. Rather, they allege that Kodak stock was on a steady decline due to
fundamental problems with the company itself. In other words, plaintiffs allege that the price of
Kodak stock, far from being inflated, accurately tracked the company’s steadily worsening fortunes,
which had no reasonable chance of improving. Plaintiffs further allege that at some point, defendants
should have stepped in and, notwithstanding the directives in the plan documents, ceased to maintain
the Funds’ investments in Kodak stock.
Given these allegations, the fact that the market, on any given date, may have provided the
best available estimate of the “value” of Kodak stock, does not necessarily reveal much about whether
defendants acted prudently in continuing to invest in that stock. See In re Ceinture, 516 F.3d 1095,
1102 (9th Cir. 2008) (noting that a “myriad of circumstances” surrounding investments in company
stock could support a violation of the prudence requirement). The question is not whether defendants
paid an artificially inflated price for Kodak stock, but whether they should have realized that Kodak
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stock represented such a poor long-term investment that they should have ceased to purchase, hold,
or offer Kodak stock to plan participants.
Given its very different fact pattern, Dudenhoeffer provides little explicit guidance on this
question. What it does make clear, though, is that (1) there is no presumption that a fiduciary acted
prudently, regardless of the type of fund at issue; and (2) as stated in ERISA, an ESOP fiduciary is
exempt from § 1104(a)(1)(B)’s duty of prudence, but only to the extent that the statute requires
diversification. In all other respects, then, an ESOP fiduciary’s duty of prudence is no different or
less stringent than that of any other ERISA fiduciary.
With respect to the ESOP, then, the initial decision to invest primarily, if not entirely, in
Kodak stock is virtually unassailable, and indeed is not challenged here.
For that matter,
diversification, in the sense of assembling a portfolio of funds so as to minimize risk, was never truly
an option for the administrator. The ESOP document expressly states that “[t]he Trust Fund will be
invested primarily in Employer Securities ... .” As Dudenhoeffer makes clear, the administrator
cannot be deemed imprudent merely for putting most or all of the plan’s eggs in the Kodak basket,
at least at the outset. Plaintiffs do not suggest otherwise.
That does not answer the question, however, whether at some point Kodak stock became
such an obviously poor investment, not just in hindsight but prospectively, that continued investment
in Kodak stock was rendered objectively imprudent. At such a point, the issue would no longer have
been one of diversification, but of whether the plan should continue to invest in Kodak stock at all.
That is what plaintiffs allege happened here. See Lanfear v. Home Depot, Inc., 679 F.3d 1267, 127677 (11th Cir. 2012) (since plaintiffs’ claim was that, even putting aside diversification concerns,
employer’s stock was an imprudent investment and for that reason the defendants had a duty to divest
the plan of the stock and stop purchasing it, plaintiffs’ claim did not fall within the
§
1104(a)(2) exemption for failure to diversify).
While the stated purposes of the ESOP include enabling Kodak employees “to acquire stock
ownership” in Kodak, and “to provide a method of corporate finance to the Company,” ESOP Plan
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§ 1.02, those could not be the fiduciaries’ primary concerns, either by law or by the terms of the
governing document. The ESOP document provides at § 5.02 that “[a]ll contributions made pursuant
to the Plan shall be held by the Trustee ... for the exclusive benefit of those Employees who are
Participants under the Plan” and their beneficiaries. It further states (in language tracking ERISA,
29 U.S.C. § 1104(a)(1)(B)) that,
[n]otwithstanding any other provision of this Plan, and the Trust Agreement, the Trustee,
SOPCO and the Company shall exercise their powers and discharge their duties under this
Plan and the Trust Agreement for the exclusive purpose of providing benefits to Employees
and their Beneficiaries, and shall act with the care, skill, prudence and diligence under the
circumstances that a prudent man acting in a like capacity and familiar with such matters
would use in the conduct of an enterprise of a like character and with like aims.
ESOP Doc. § 15.09.
Furthermore, “ERISA’s primary purpose is to protect beneficiaries of employee retirement
plans.” Kopp v. Klein, 722 F.3d 327, 334 (5th Cir. 2013) (citing Pilot Life Ins. Co. v. Dedeaux, 481
U.S. 41, 44 (1987)). Whatever the purposes of the ESOP were stated to be, they had to yield to that
paramount purpose. See also Kopp, 722 F.3d at 334 (ERISA’s “duty of loyalty requires fiduciaries
to act ‘solely in the interest’ of plan participants and beneficiaries”) (quoting 29 U.S.C.
§ 1104(a)(1)).
In addition, even before the Supreme Court’s decision in Dudenhoeffer, rejecting the Moench
presumption, plaintiffs could state a facially valid claim against an ESOP fiduciary based on
allegations that publicly available information showed that the company in question was in “dire
circumstances,” or on the brink of collapse. See Citigroup, 662 F.3d at 140; see also Quan v.
Computer Sciences Corp., 623 F.3d 870, 882 (9th Cir. 2010) (“To overcome the presumption of
prudent investment, plaintiffs must ... make allegations that clearly implicate the company’s viability
as an ongoing concern or show a precipitous decline in the employer’s stock combined with evidence
that the company is on the brink of collapse or is undergoing serious mismanagement”) (internal
quotes and alterations omitted). Put another way, a plaintiff could attempt to rebut the presumption
through evidence that the challenged investments “would defeat or substantially impair the
accomplishment of the purposes of the trust,” i.e., that “the ERISA fiduciary could not have believed
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reasonably that continued adherence to the ESOP’s direction was in keeping with the settlor’s
expectations of how a prudent trustee would operate.” Kopp, 722 F.3d at 336 (quoting Moench, 62
F.3d at 571) (additional citations omitted).
Even were the Moench presumption still controlling in this circuit, the allegations in the
complaint might well be sufficient to withstand a motion to dismiss. A fortiori, the complaint is
sufficient, given the Supreme Court’s rejection of that presumption. The complaint recites a history
not just of Kodak’s inexorable slide toward bankruptcy, but of publicly available information
contemporaneously documenting that slide, step by painful step, and accurately forecasting Kodak’s
bleak future. Given those allegations, the Court cannot rule, at the pleading stage, that plaintiffs have
failed to make out a claim that defendants should either have ceased offering the ESOP as an
investment option, sooner than they did, or stopped investing the plan’s assets in Kodak stock.
In regard to the publicly available information that allegedly made clear how unwise it would
be to maintain long-term investments in Kodak, the complaint alleges that during the class period,
Kodak stock’s rating, as assessed by independent entities such as Moody’s, went from “highly
speculative” to “extremely speculative” to “in default with little prospect for recovery.” Dkt. #48 ¶
134. News articles likewise documented Kodak’s declining fortunes, sometimes using photographyinspired metaphors, such as, “Eastman Kodak Co. is struggling to stay in the picture,” id. ¶ 164.
Other metaphors were less photographically inspired, but no less blunt: Kodak was “selling the family
silver to keep the lights on,” id. ¶ 165 (referring to Kodak’s sale of intellectual property to raise cash);
Kodak was “jumping from one buggy whip business to another,” id. ¶ 187 (referring to Kodak’s
belated entry into the inkjet printer business, just as that business was becoming antiquated); and
Kodak was “putting the last logs on the fire” (referring to Kodak’s efforts to pledge assets for new
financing), id. ¶ 191.
Other news reports were less imaginatively phrased, but equally clear: a July 2010 Bloomberg
article titled, “Kodak’s Turnaround Story Getting Old,” was skeptical of Kodak’s repeated, but
unfulfilled predictions of future profitability, id. ¶ 142; in January 2011, a Deutsche Bank analyst
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reported, under the headline, “Fundamentals deteriorate further,” that Kodak’s “core business [was]
challenged,” and that Kodak was burning through cash at an alarming rate. Id. ¶ 151.
Eventually, analysts began to predict trouble for Kodak in terms that were more specific, both
as to the nature of the impending harm and its imminence. In or about August 2011, an analyst with
KDP Investment Advisors stated that Kodak “could run out of cash in early 2012.” Id. ¶ 166. In
September, Reuters reported that KDP predicted that Kodak “could file for bankruptcy ‘between now
and 2012.’” Id. ¶ 169. At about the same time, Motley Fool opined that Kodak had “been living
paycheck to paycheck for a very long time,” and that “its paychecks and patent-trolling days are
numbered.” Id. ¶ 170. Fitch Ratings likewise stated that “default of some kind appears probable.”
Id. ¶ 173.
The complaint alleges additional facts concerning similar reports and predictions, but they
need not be recited here. The point is that, according to plaintiffs, over the course of the class period
it became clear to all but the willfully blind that Kodak was headed for bankruptcy, and that its stock
price had no reasonable hope of turning around. The company announced on January 19, 2012 that
it and its U.S. subsidiaries had filed voluntary petitions under Chapter 11 in bankruptcy court, and
in the following month Kodak announced that it was discontinuing the ESOP. According to the
complaint, at no point prior to that did defendants take action to preserve or protect ESOP
participants’ investments.
Given these allegations, and particularly without the Moench presumption of prudence, I find
that plaintiffs have stated a facially valid claim against the Kodak defendants, with regard to the
ESOP. Accepting the truth of plaintiffs’ allegations, a reasonable factfinder could conclude that at
some point during the class period, the ESOP fiduciary should have stepped in and, rather than blindly
following the plan directive to invest primarily in Kodak stock, shifted the plan’s assets into more
stable investments, as permitted by the plan document, and as consistent with the plan’s and ERISA’s
purposes. See Peabody v. Davis, 636 F.3d 368, 375 (7th Cir. 2011) (upholding district court’s finding
“that a prudent investor would not have remained so heavily invested in [the company]’s stock as the
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company’s fortunes declined precipitously over a five-year period for reasons that foretold further
and continuing declines”).
In reaching this holding, the Court finds support in Circuit Judge Chester J. Straub’s dissent
in Citigroup, in which he to a great extent anticipated the Supreme Court’s later rejection of the
Moench presumption. Stating that he “[fou]nd the underpinnings of the Moench presumption to be
fundamentally unsound,” 662 F.3d at 147, Judge Straub stated that he would have subjected the
defendants’ decisions at issue in that case to plenary review. Id. at 154.
Judge Straub would further have held, under that plenary standard, that the plaintiffs had
stated a claim against the plan administrator for breach of the duty of prudence, based on the
plaintiffs’ allegations that, in Judge Straub’s view, “render[ed] it plausible that [the defendants] knew
about Citigroup’s massive subprime [mortgage] exposure,” which rendered continued investment in
Citigroup imprudent. Id. at 155. Stating that the plaintiffs’ allegations, if true, would support a
finding that the defendants acted imprudently, Judge Straub added, “That, however, is a fact-intensive
inquiry ill-suited for resolution at the pleading stage.” He would therefore have vacated the district
court’s dismissal of the complaint and remanded for further proceedings. Id. at 167.6
Again, in contrast to Citigroup, this case does not involve allegations that Kodak appeared
on the surface to be a healthy company, and that its relatively high stock price masked some deepseated problems that were about to be exposed. If anything, the allegations here paint an even more
damning picture, of a company that was widely viewed among knowledgeable investors and analysts
as headed toward default, bankruptcy, or worse, yet defendants chose to remain invested in Kodak
stock. Kodak did not appear to be a healthy company, on the surface or otherwise.
In short, plaintiffs do not contend that the price of Kodak stock was headed for a sudden,
precipitous decline that defendants should have seen coming. They allege that Kodak stock was on
6
While its adoption of the Moench presumption has been overturned by the Supreme
Court, I also note that in Pfeil v. State Street Bank and Trust Co., 671 F.3d 585 (6th Cir.), cert.
denied, 133 S.Ct. 758 (2012), the Sixth Circuit held that lower courts should generally “consider
the presumption in the context of a fuller evidentiary record rather than just the pleadings and
their exhibits.” Id. at 596.
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a long, steady, virtually unstoppable downhill slide, and that no prescience or inside knowledge was
needed to realize that it would continue to do so. That, in my view, states a claim under ERISA, as
to the ESOP. Cf. Wright v. Oregon Metallurgical Corp., 360 F.3d 1090, 1098 (9th Cir. 2004)
(applying Moench presumption and affirming district court’s dismissal of plaintiff’s prudence claim,
where published accounts of company’s financial data showed that company “was, in fact, profitable
and paying substantial dividends throughout” the relevant period).
As to the SIP, its governing document provides that the SIP must include, as one investment
option, the Kodak Stock Fund, which “consists primarily of Employer Securities,” and that the ESOP
trust fund must likewise “be invested primarily in Employer Securities ... .” Participants were
provided with a range of options, and were not required to invest in the Kodak Stock Fund.
At the same time, however, the trustee was not required to invest the Kodak Stock Fund
entirely in Kodak stock; the SIP provided only that the trustee would maintain “an investment option
that consists primarily of Employer Securities known as the Kodak Stock Fund ... .” SIP
§ 7.01(b)(1). As the Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit noted in Lanfear, 679 F.3d at 1277,
the plan thus “did provide the defendants with some discretion. Although it required [an employer]
Stock Fund as an investment option, it did not require that fund to be invested exclusively in
[employer] stock.” So long as the fund remained primarily invested in employer stock, “the
defendants had discretion to sell [employer] stock or to stop investing in it. Their exercise of that
discretion, or failure to exercise it, is subject to judicial review to determine if they violated their duty
of prudence.”7
7
Although the court in Lanfear went on to affirm the district court’s dismissal of the
plaintiffs’ complaint, it did so based in large part on the now-inapplicable Moench presumption.
See 679 F.3d at 1280-81.
I also note that while some courts have “interpreted the phrase ‘invested primarily in’ as a
grant of limited discretion to forgo investment in company stock entirely,” others have construed
it as “requir[ing] fiduciaries to invest most of the fund’s assets in company stock, while granting
them discretion to determine precisely where within a limited range the allotment should fall.”
Gearren v. McGraw-Hill Companies, 690 F.Supp.2d 254, 264 (S.D.N.Y. 2010) (footnote and
citations omitted), aff’d, 660 F.3d 605 (2d Cir. 2011), cert. denied, 133 S.Ct. 476 (2012). On
(continued...)
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True, SIP participants were free to decide in which funds they wished to invest. The Kodak
Stock Fund was only one of a range of investment alternatives available to participants, who were
also free to transfer the amounts in their individual accounts from one fund to another, at virtually any
time.
“The availability of other options does not necessarily excuse offering one imprudent
investment,” however. White, 714 F.3d at 996. While the availability of other investment options
is a relevant factor for the court to consider, “a fiduciary cannot free himself from his duty to act as
a prudent man simply by arguing that other funds, which individuals may or may not elect to combine
with a company stock fund, could theoretically, in combination, create a prudent portfolio.” DiFelice
v. U.S. Airways, Inc., 497 F.3d 410, 423 (4th Cir. 2007); accord Lanfear, 679 F.3d at 1277. Rather,
“a fiduciary must initially determine, and continue to monitor, the prudence of each investment option
available to plan participants.” DeFelice, 497 F.3d at 423. See also Gearren v. McGraw-Hill
Companies, 690 F.Supp.2d 254, 265 (S.D.N.Y. 2010) (“the language of the plan agreement cannot
extinguish fiduciary status altogether, since a named fiduciary retains the ability to ignore the terms
of the plan, at least under certain circumstances”).
I recognize that ERISA does not require defendants “to act as personal investment advisers
to plan participants ... .” White, 714 F.3d at 994. In addition, as courts have long noted, fiduciaries
of these types of plans are often pulled in two directions, since they are charged both under ERISA
with protecting participants’ assets and under the plan (as permitted by § 1104(a)(2)) with investing
in employer stock. See, e.g., Kopp, 722 F.3d at 334. Fiduciaries may also be put in a precarious
position in the sense that, if they dump a company’s stock just as it bottoms out, they could be
exposed to liability if it later rebounds, with the result that they deprived the participants of the
opportunity to profit from that rebound. See White, 714 F.3d at 987.
7
(...continued)
this motion to dismiss, however, the Court need not choose between those two alternatives, since
even under the latter, more deferential standard, I find that plaintiffs have stated a facially valid
claim.
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Nevertheless, there are countervailing considerations as well. While it is true that fiduciaries
are generally obligated to follow plan documents, that is so only insofar as the terms of those
documents are consistent with ERISA. White, 714 F.3d at 997 (citing 29 U.S.C. § 1104(a)(1)(D)).
The requirements of the statute control.
In addition, notwithstanding the general preference for investments in employer stock, the
defendants here were required to act with care, skill, prudence and diligence, for the benefit of the
plan participants. Kopp, 722 F.3d at 334. That is particularly so considering the very real possibility
that “many employees will not understand the riskiness of an employer stock fund.” White, 714 F.3d
at 993 (citing research showing that most employees do not appreciate the risks associated with
undiversified employer stock).
It is also worth noting that Moench itself did not impose an insuperable burden on plaintiffs.
The Moench presumption did not save the defendants there. In fact (as summarized by the Fifth
Circuit), “Moench concluded it might have been imprudent for the fiduciaries to continue investing
in company stock that steadily lost ninety-eight percent of its value over two years, falling from
$18.25 per share to $0.25 per share. It was also relevant that the fiduciaries were aware of the
company’s impending collapse, and the employer ultimately filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy
protection.” Kirschbaum v. Reliant Energy, Inc., 526 F.3d 243, 255 (5th Cir. 2008) (citing Moench,
62 F.3d at 557). The court in Moench therefore vacated the district court’s grant of summary
judgment for the plan committee and remanded for further proceedings. Moench, 62 F.3d at 572.
Defendants are correct that plaintiffs have not identified any specific date during the class
period on which it became imprudent to continue holding Kodak stock. That alone does not defeat
plaintiffs’ claim, however. That plaintiffs have not pinpointed some moment at which defendants’
actions went from prudent to imprudent does not mean that they have not stated a facially valid claim;
all it means is that these are issues that remain for discovery and later resolution, either at trial or on
a motion for summary judgment. Cf. Beesley v. International Paper Corp., No. 06-703, 2009 WL
260782, at *3 (S.D.Ill. Feb. 4, 2009) (denying defendants’ motion for more definite statement based
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on their contention that plaintiffs had failed to allege specific dates on which plan’s investment options
became imprudent, and stating that defendants could obtain that information through discovery). To
hold otherwise would be akin to saying that a sea captain could not be found negligent for not issuing
an abandon-ship order, merely because the ship sank slowly rather than suddenly.
The Court must also remain cognizant of the fact that this case is only at the pleading stage.
In the aftermath of Dudenhoeffer, plaintiffs need no longer plead facts to overcome the
Moench presumption. The question is whether, assuming the truth of plaintiffs’ allegations, they have
stated a plausible claim that defendants violated their duty to act prudently. I conclude that they have.
Cf. Pfeil v. State Street Bank and Trust Co., 671 F.3d 585 (6th Cir. 2012) (adopting
Moench presumption, pre-Dudenhoeffer, but holding that “the better course is to permit the lower
courts to consider the presumption in the context of a fuller evidentiary record rather than just the
pleadings and their exhibits”). See also Harris v. Amgen, Inc., 770 F.3d 865, 882 (9th Cir. 2014)
(concluding, post-Dudenhoeffer, that plaintiffs had sufficiently alleged that defendants violated the
duty of loyalty and care they owed as fiduciaries under ERISA, but emphasizing that a “determination
whether defendants have actually violated their fiduciary duties requires fact-based determinations,
such as the likely effect of the alternative actions available to defendants, to be made by the district
court on remand, with the assistance of expert opinion as appropriate”).
II. BNY Mellon
According to the complaint, Mellon is the designated trustee of the SIP. Dkt. #48 ¶ 38.
Under the SIP plan document, “the Trustee is responsible for the management and control of the Plan
assets to the extent provided in the Trust.” Dkt. #74-1 at 33 § 3.12. That document further states
that “[t]he Trustee will maintain within the Trust” the Kodak Stock Fund, as well as “a range of
investment alternatives selected by SIPCO ... .” Id. at 56 § 7.01(a).
Further details of the relationship between Kodak and Mellon are set forth in both the SIP
document and the original trust agreement between Kodak and Mellon’s predecessor, Boston (Dkt.
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#55-4). The trust agreement gives certain specified powers and duties to the trustee, and provides
that the trustee is authorized to “[g]enerally take all actions, whether or not expressly authorized,
which the Trustee may deem necessary or desirable for the fulfillment of its duties hereunder.” Dkt.
#55-4 at 9 § 3.01(p).
The SIP document also assigns “certain specified powers, duties, responsibilities and
obligations” to the Director of Human Resources, SIPCO, and the Trustee ... .” The document states
that each of those entities shall “be responsible solely for the proper exercise of its own functions ...
.” Dkt. #74-1 at 33 § 3.12. The document states that
[g]enerally, the Director, Human Resources will be responsible for amending and terminating
the Plan and Trust. SIPCO is responsible for appointing and removing the Trustee, selecting
monitoring and administering investment options (subject to the requirement that the Kodak
Stock Fund be an available investment option), and administering the Plain as described
herein; and the Trustee is responsible for the management and control of the Plan assets to
the extent provided in the Trust.
Id.
In support of its motion, Mellon contends that it is a “directed trustee,” meaning that it
operated at the direction of SIPCO. As such, Mellon argues that it is essentially absolved of all
liability, because it exercised no fiduciary duties with respect to the alleged wrongs here. It simply
did what it was directed to do. In response, plaintiffs contend that they have alleged enough facts to
create an issue of fact in that regard.
Certain principles govern the Court’s analysis. The first relates to the general role of directed
trustees. “Directed trustees are permitted by ERISA: if an ERISA plan ‘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].” Summers, 453 F.3d at 406 (quoting 29 U.S.C.
§ 1103(a)(1)).
Second, whenever the Court considers a claim for breach of fiduciary duty, a threshold
question is whether plaintiffs have sufficiently alleged the exercise of such duties. It is not enough
- 20 -
merely to allege that the defendant was a fiduciary, in a general sense; plaintiffs must allege that the
defendant both exercised and breached a particular fiduciary duty, causing harm to the plaintiffs.
Section 3(21)(A)(i) of ERISA, 29 U.S.C. § 1002(21)(A)(i), contemplates “two discrete
activities: (1) the exercise of discretionary management or discretionary control over the plan; and
(2) the exercise of any authority or control over the management or disposition of plan assets.”
Santomenno v. John Hancock Life Ins. Co., 768 F.3d 284, 293 (3d Cir. 2014). As the Third Circuit
has explained,
[b]ecause an entity is only a fiduciary to the extent it possesses authority or discretionary
control over the plan, [the court] must ask whether [the entity] is a fiduciary with respect to
the particular activity in question. In every case charging breach of ERISA fiduciary duty,
then, the threshold question is not whether the actions of some person employed to provide
services under a plan adversely affected a plan beneficiary’s interest, but whether that person
was acting as a fiduciary (that is, was performing a fiduciary function) when taking the action
subject to complaint.
Renfro v. Unisys Corp., 671 F.3d 314, 321 (3d Cir. 2011) (internal quotes and citations omitted).
To the extent that a trustee exercises discretionary control over a plan or its assets, then, the
trustee can act as a fiduciary, and can be held liable if it breaches its fiduciary duties. Whether a
trustee has fiduciary status, or has acted as a fiduciary, is for the most part “a fact-intensive inquiry,
making the resolution of that issue inappropriate for a motion to dismiss.” In re Regions Morgan
Keegan ERISA Litig., 692 F.Supp.2d 944, 964 (W.D.Tenn. 2010); see also In re Elec. Data Sys.
Corp. ERISA Litig., 305 F.Supp.2d 658, 665 (E.D.Tex. 2004) (“It is typically premature to determine
a defendant’s fiduciary status at a motion to dismiss stage of the proceedings.”)
In general, “[d]irected trustees have extremely limited fiduciary duties over a plan’s assets.”
McCarty v. Holt, No. 12-3279, 2013 WL 775531, at *5 (D.N.J. Feb. 27, 2013) (citing Srein v.
Frankford Trust Co., 323 F.3d 214, 222 (3d Cir. 2003). See also In re Lehman Bros. Securities and
ERISA Litig., No. 09 MD 2017, 2012 WL 6021097, at *2 (S.D.N.Y. Dec. 4, 2012) (“the fiduciary
duties of a directed trustee are extremely narrow”) (internal quote omitted). In short, a directed
trustee’s “liability is limited to instances in which it fails to follow ... proper directions or it complies
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with directions that are improper, or contrary to the Plan or ERISA.” Id. (quoting DeFelice v. U.S.
Airways, Inc., 397 F.Supp.2d 735, 746 (E.D.Va. 2005)).
As in many situations involving such plans, that standard is easier stated than applied. Courts
have held, however, that “the duty of prudence of the directed trustee should be limited to what is
‘plain,’” in other words, “where the directed trustee knows or should know (in his or her role as
trustee) that a fiduciary’s direction is imprudent, there is a duty to disobey the direction.” Chesemore
v. Alliance Holdings, Inc., 770 F.Supp.2d 950, 974 (W.D.Wisc. 2011); F.W. Webb Co. v. State Street
Bank and Trust Co., No. 09 Civ. 1241, 2010 WL 3219284, at *13 (S.D.N.Y. Aug. 12, 2010)
(directed trustee “had a duty of prudence, which required it to inquire into any investment instruction
that it knew or should have known was imprudent, contrary to ERISA, or contrary to the terms of
the Plan”); In re Worldcom ERISA Litig., 354 F.Supp.2d 423, 445 (S.D.N.Y.2005) (directed trustee
can be held liable for what he knows or “ought to know”). See also Summers, 453 F.3d at 407 (“The
trustee physically controls the trust assets; knowingly to invest them imprudently or let them remain
invested imprudently is irresponsible behavior for a trustee, whose fundamental duty is to take as
much care with the trust assets as he would take with his own property”); Chesemore, 770 F.Supp.2d
950 (denying motion to dismiss where plaintiffs alleged facts suggesting that plan trustees should have
known that direction to purchase employer’s stock would be imprudent).
While the Court harbors serious doubts about the claim against Mellon, I will permit the claim
to go forward at this time. Though a directed trustee should not be expected to second-guess every
direction of a plan administrator, it should disobey instructions that are plainly imprudent. It cannot
simply close its eyes and ignore what was there to be seen.
Based on the allegations here, I cannot say as a matter of law that plaintiffs have failed to
make out a claim against Mellon under that standard. As explained above in connection with the
claim against the Kodak defendants, public information allegedly made it obvious to all but the
willfully blind that Kodak was headed toward bankruptcy. Assuming the truth of those allegations,
plaintiffs have at least presented a plausible claim that Mellon should at some point have refused to
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follow the Kodak defendants’ directions to continue investing in Kodak stock, or at least questioned
the wisdom of the Kodak defendants’ directive to maintain the status quo concerning the purchase
of company securities. See Solis v. Webb, 931 F.Supp.2d 936, 951 (N.D.Cal. 2012) (ruling that
complaint presented a valid cause of action against plan trustees, even though they followed
fiduciary’s direction to purchase plan sponsor’s stock, because they knew that carrying out the
direction would cause the ESOP to pay more than adequate consideration for the stock in violation
of ERISA and the plan document); In re Sprint Corp. ERISA Litig., 388 F.Supp.2d 1207, 1236
(D.Kan. 2004) (“Because plaintiffs have alleged facts which, if proven, could lead a reasonable jury
to conclude that [the directed trustee] followed directions that it knew to be contrary to ERISA,
Fidelity’s motion to dismiss is denied”).
III. Co-Fiduciary Liability
Plaintiffs have asserted a claim for co-fiduciary liability under 29 U.S.C. § 1105(a), which
provides that a fiduciary can be held liable for a co-fiduciary’s actions if the fiduciary knowingly
participates in, tries to conceal, or enables the co-fiduciary’s breach, or, knowing of the breach, does
not attempt to remedy the breach. The Second Circuit has characterized this provision as providing
“that a fiduciary is liable if the fiduciary’s failure to exercise reasonable care leads to a co-fiduciary’s
breach.” Smith v. Local 819 I.B.T. Pension Plan, 291 F.3d 236, 241 (2d Cir. 2002).
Both Mellon and the Kodak defendants have moved to dismiss this claim, but generally on
the ground that plaintiffs have failed to allege a breach in the first place, or that they have not alleged
defendants’ knowledge of the breach. For the reasons stated with respect to plaintiffs’ other claims,
I find those arguments unpersuasive. If Kodak’s future was as obviously bleak as plaintiffs allege,
then a finder of fact could conclude that both sets of defendants knowingly participated in the breach
of each other’s duties. Defendants’ motions to dismiss this claim are therefore denied. See Slack v.
International Union of Operating Engineers, No. C-13-5001, 2014 WL 4090383, at *17 (N.D.Cal.
Aug. 19, 2014) (finding that plaintiffs had stated claim for co-fiduciary liability based on allegations
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that acquiesced to co-fiduciaries’ “pressure” to approve investment and failed to make any due
diligence or reasonable investigation into the investment); Chesemore v. Alliance Holdings, Inc., 948
F.Supp.2d 928, 949 (W.D.Wisc. 2013) (finding after bench trial that trustee defendants were liable
for allowing ESOP to enter prohibited transaction without adequate investigation of fair market
value), amended on other grounds, 2013 WL 6989526 (W.D.Wisc. Oct. 16, 2013).
Again, this is not meant to suggest that the Court believes that this claim has merit. That is
not the issue before me on these motions to dismiss. The only question before me now is whether
plaintiffs have stated a facially plausible claim, and, assuming the truth of plaintiffs’ allegations, I
conclude that they have.
CONCLUSION
Defendants’ motions to dismiss the complaint (Dkt. #54, #56) are denied.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
_______________________________________
DAVID G. LARIMER
United States District Judge
Dated: Rochester, New York
December 17, 2014.
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