Severance Agreement Bars Former Employee From Suing Over ESOP

A federal court judge cited a 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals decision in Chaplin v. NationsCredit Corp. that concluded, “Although the release does not specifically mention ERISA, it need not do so, as general ‘any-and-all language covers a claim for ERISA benefits.’”

A federal court has determined that a severance agreement bars a former employee of Telligen, Inc. from proceeding with a lawsuit claiming Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) prohibited transaction violations regarding Telligen’s employee stock ownership plans (ESOP).

The plaintiff filed the lawsuit on behalf of the plan, alleging Bankers Trust Company of South Dakota, the plan’s trustee, breached its fiduciary duty when it authorized the plan’s purchase of Telligen stock, when it authorized the plan to take on a loan to finance the stock purchase, and when it accepted payment from Telligen for Bankers Trust’s trustee services. She also alleges Bankers Trust breached its fiduciary duty by entering into an indemnification agreement with Telligen.

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According to the U.S. District Court for the Southern district of Iowa’s order granting Bankers Trust’s motion for summary judgment, in July 2014, the plaintiff’s employment with Telligen was terminated. She signed a severance agreement and received severance pay and job transition services.

She offers a declaration in support of her response to Banker Trust’s motion for summary judgment, but U.S. District Judge Rebecca Goodgame Ebinger said the Court does not consider the information in the declaration that contradicts the plaintiff’s prior deposition testimony. “On a motion for summary judgment, a court generally considers an otherwise admissible declaration or affidavit, including those that restate or elaborate on prior deposition testimony. However, a party may not manufacture an issue of fact or credibility by contradicting the party’s own earlier testimony with a declaration or affidavit,” Ebinger wrote in her opinion.

In her deposition testimony, the plaintiff said she did not recollect the conversation in which Telligen terminated her employment or the documents she signed at the time. But, in her declaration, she said, “I felt in that meeting that whatever documents they wanted me to sign, had to be signed at that meeting.”

Ebinger also considered the plaintiff’s education and business experience, as well as the fact that she was given 45 days to decide whether to sign the agreement and after signing, seven days to revoke it, to conclude that the plaintiff knowingly and voluntarily entered in to the agreement.

According to the court order, the agreement indicates the plaintiff releases all claims “of any nature whatsoever, in law or equity, which [she] ever had, now has, or [she] or [her] heirs, executors and administrators hereafter may have, from the beginning of time to the date of this Agreement, arising from, or otherwise related to, [Innis’s] employment relationship with [Telligen].” And in capital, bold letters above her signature, the Agreement indicates, “YOU ARE RELEASING ALL KNOWN CLAIMS.”

Determining that the language is sufficiently clear (and expansive) to indicate the plaintiff released ERISA claims, Ebinger cited a 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals decision in Chaplin v. NationsCredit Corp. that concluded, “Although the release does not specifically mention ERISA, it need not do so, as general ‘any-and-all language covers a claim for ERISA benefits.’”

Ebinger also found that because Bankers Trust acted on behalf of Telligen’s stockholders, Bankers Trust is a releasee. In the Agreement, the plaintiff released claims against “[Telligen] and each of [Telligen’s] owners, members, stockholders, . . . affiliates, . . . and all persons acting on behalf of, by, through, under or in concert with any of them.”

SOA Proposes New Mortality Tables

The Society of Actuaries (SOA) proposed mortality tables include mortality data from both single-employer and multiemployer defined benefit (DB) plans.

The Society of Actuaries (SOA) released an exposure draft of new private-sector retirement plan mortality tables.

The new tables, Pri-2012, honor the SOA’s commitment to updating its mortality tables every five years, as new data is available. The SOA will accept comments to the exposure draft through July 31, and plans to finalize the tables later this year.

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The Pri-2012 mortality tables provide pension actuaries and plan sponsors with the most current information to measure retirement plan obligations and make forward-looking mortality improvement assumptions. The Pri-2012 tables were developed from data collected for 2010-2014, and named for the central year of 2012. It includes 16.1 million life-years of exposure and 343,000 deaths from 402 pension plans. Pri-2012 includes mortality data from both multiemployer and single-employer defined benefit (DB) plans.

The SOA says most plan sponsors that update their mortality assumption from the RP-2006 tables to the Pri-2012 tables will experience only a small change in their pension liabilities, usually within plus or minus 1%. The amount will vary depending on the plan’s mix of occupations, ages and gender, as well as the discount rate and other assumptions used to compute liabilities.

When moving from the RP-2006 tables to the Pri-2012 tables, the life expectancy of a 65-year-old female pension plan participant remains roughly unchanged at 87.4 years, while the life expectancy of a 65-year-old male pension plan participant decreases 1.3%, from 85 years to 84.7 years.

Participants in multiemployer plans did not exhibit significantly different mortality than participants in single-employer plans. Additionally, the SOA found that type of occupation (blue-collar vs. white-collar) is emerging as a stronger predictor of mortality than plan benefit amount.

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