John Loffredo v. Daimler AG ( 2012 )


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  •                 NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
    File Name: 12a1027n.06
    No. 11-1824
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    FILED
    Sept 25, 2012
    JOHN LOFFREDO, et al.,                           )                     DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
    )
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,                    )
    )
    v.                                               )   ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED
    )   STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE
    DAIMLER AG,                                      )   EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
    )
    Defendant-Appellee,                       )
    )
    STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST                      )
    COMPANY,                                         )
    )
    Defendant-Appellee,                       )
    )
    DIETER ZETSCHE,                                  )
    )
    Defendant-Appellee,                       )
    )
    THOMAS LASORDA,                                  )
    )
    Defendant-Appellee.                       )
    Before: MOORE, SUTTON and STRANCH, Circuit Judges.
    SUTTON, J., delivered the opinion of the court except for Section II through II.A.
    STRANCH, J., joined in all parts except Section II through II.A and delivered a separate concurring
    opinion (p. 23). MOORE, J., concurred in the judgment and delivered a separate opinion (pp.
    17–22), in which STRANCH, J., joined and which constitutes the opinion of the court.
    No. 11-1824
    Loffredo v. Daimler AG
    John Loffredo and his co-plaintiffs are former Chrysler executives. When the company went
    bankrupt in 2009, they lost most, in some cases all, of their benefits under its Supplemental
    Executive Retirement Plan. Claiming that the Plan would have survived the bankruptcy had it been
    properly managed, they sued Chrysler’s former parent company, several of Chrysler’s (other) former
    executives and the trustee responsible for managing the retirement funds. The district court
    dismissed the claims, holding that the federal Employee Retirement Income Security Act, 29 U.S.C.
    § 1001 et seq., preempted plaintiffs’ state-law claims: age discrimination, breach of fiduciary duty,
    promissory estoppel and silent fraud. We affirm the dismissal of all of the claims, save the age-
    discrimination claim.
    I.
    At various times before 2007, John Loffredo and other Chrysler executives participated in
    the company’s Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan. To facilitate benefit payments, Chrysler
    established a trust, held by State Street Bank and Trust Company as trustee, in which it deposited
    assets intended to cover the Plan benefits. The trust document provided that Chrysler could use trust
    funds to pay benefits under the Plan and related expenses, except that “[i]n the event of Insolvency
    of [Chrysler], all money or other property contributed to the Trust . . . shall be available to pay the
    claims of any general creditor” of Chrysler. R. 25-3 at 8, PageID 290. The Plan also authorized
    Chrysler to buy out an employee’s right to benefits by creating an annuity paying an equivalent
    stream of income.
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    Loffredo v. Daimler AG
    In 1998, Chrysler discussed a merger with Daimler. When some Chrysler executives
    expressed concern over the merger’s implications for their supplemental benefits, Daimler’s Chief
    Financial Officer told them that “it has always been the understanding that as long as [Daimler] is
    a majority stakeholder of any affiliate, [Daimler] internally sees to it that the affiliate has sufficient
    assets to meet its obligations with a third party.” R. 31-2 at 9, PageID 462. Plaintiffs remained
    employed with Chrysler. The companies merged later that year, producing a new company, Daimler
    Chrysler AG, in which Chrysler became a wholly owned subsidiary.
    Jump forward a few years. By 2005 or 2006, plaintiffs claim, the defendants knew Chrysler’s
    financial situation was precarious and that the company might need to file for bankruptcy. Based
    on this knowledge, the defendants allegedly used trust assets to purchase annuities for some active
    Chrysler executives, as well as some selected retirees (not including the plaintiffs).               This
    securitization protected the selected beneficiaries from any future shortfalls in the trust account,
    while the remaining participants continued to depend on the trust for their monthly benefits checks.
    The defendants allegedly hid the true state of Chrysler’s finances from the remaining trust
    beneficiaries, preventing them from cashing in their own benefits for annuities.
    In 2007, Daimler Chrysler AG sold its majority interest in Chrysler to Cerberus Capital
    Management, L.P. Chrysler eventually became insolvent and filed for bankruptcy in 2009.
    Consistent with the terms of the Plan, the remaining assets of the Plan became part of Chrysler’s
    bankruptcy estate. Had the Plan been fully funded, plaintiffs allege, the federal government (which
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    Loffredo v. Daimler AG
    participated in the bankruptcy proceedings) would have ensured the Plan survived the bankruptcy
    intact. The Plan’s unsecured beneficiaries instead lost most of their benefits.
    The plaintiffs (on behalf of a class) sued Daimler, Cerberus and State Street Bank, as well
    as Dieter Zetsche and Thomas LaSorda, both of whom served as Chrysler executives before the sale
    to Cerberus, in state court. They alleged state-law claims of promissory estoppel, breach of fiduciary
    duty, age discrimination, fraud and statutory conversion. Because the plaintiffs did not contest the
    dismissal of their conversion claim against State Street, we will not address that claim.
    The defendants removed the case to federal court. Once there, the plaintiffs agreed to dismiss
    Cerberus. Loffredo v. Cerberus Capital Mgt., No. 10-14214, ECF #17 (E.D. Mich. Feb. 14, 2011).
    The remaining defendants filed motions to dismiss, arguing that ERISA preempted the state-law
    claims. The district court granted the motions.
    II.
    ERISA has competing objectives: to enforce employers’ retirement-related promises without
    discouraging employers from making the promises in the first place. See Pilot Life Ins. Co. v.
    Dedeaux, 
    481 U.S. 41
    , 54 (1987). Striking a balance, Congress created a robust enforcement regime
    under which employees could vindicate these federal rights and a robust preemption regime to
    protect employers from a patchwork of additional state-by-state requirements. See Aetna Health Inc.
    v. Davila, 
    542 U.S. 200
    , 208 (2004).
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    Loffredo v. Daimler AG
    Congress also recognized that the optimal equilibrium between protection and promotion
    falls in different places for different groups of workers. While some workers need the protection of
    expansive fiduciary duties, others do not, including some management executives. See Bakri v.
    Venture Mfg. Co., 
    473 F.3d 677
    , 678 (6th Cir. 2007). For the latter group, Congress created a
    retirement-plan option that “cuts a swath through [ERISA’s] regulatory thicket,” removing many
    of the employer requirements, including its fiduciary duty and minimum funding obligations.
    Alexander v. Brigham & Women’s Physicians Org., Inc., 
    513 F.3d 37
    , 43 (1st Cir. 2008); see also
    
    Bakri, 473 F.3d at 678
    . Known as “top-hat” plans, these retirement plans are unfunded, meaning the
    employer may not set them up in a separate account insulated from the employer’s creditors in the
    case of insolvency and meaning that beneficiaries are not taxed until they receive the benefits. See
    In re IT Group, Inc., 
    448 F.3d 661
    , 665 (3d Cir. 2006).
    The parties agree that Chrysler’s Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan is a top-hat plan.
    As such, many of ERISA’s otherwise-applicable protections (and rights of action) do not apply,
    which explains why plaintiffs have largely framed their claims under state law. A threshold question
    is whether Congress’s less-intrusive regulation of top-hat plans permits a more-intrusive system of
    state regulation. The answer is no. ERISA has one express-preemption provision, see 29 U.S.C.
    § 1144(a), and (with some exceptions not relevant here) it applies equally to all ERISA benefit plans,
    preempting all state-law claims that “relate to any employee benefit plan,” 
    id. “The policy
    choices
    reflected in the inclusion of certain remedies and the exclusion of others under the federal scheme
    would be completely undermined if ERISA-plan participants . . . were free to obtain remedies under
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    Loffredo v. Daimler AG
    state law that Congress rejected in ERISA.” Pilot Life Ins. 
    Co., 481 U.S. at 54
    . “Preemption thus
    applies to every plan covered by ERISA, which necessarily includes top hat plans.” Paneccasio v.
    Unisource Worldwide, Inc., 
    532 F.3d 101
    , 113 (2d Cir. 2008); see also Cogan v. Phoenix Life Ins.
    Co., 
    310 F.3d 238
    , 242 (1st Cir. 2002); Olander v. Bucyrus-Erie Co., 
    187 F.3d 599
    , 604, 606 (7th
    Cir. 1999). “[A]ny state-law cause of action that duplicates, supplements, or supplants the ERISA
    civil enforcement remedy conflicts with the clear congressional intent to make the ERISA remedy
    exclusive and is therefore pre-empted.”        Aetna Health 
    Inc., 542 U.S. at 209
    ; see also
    Penny/Ohlmann/Nieman, Inc. v. Miami Valley Pension Corp., 
    399 F.3d 692
    , 698 (6th Cir. 2005)
    (holding that ERISA preempts state laws that “provide alternate enforcement mechanisms”).
    ERISA contains just one express-preemption provision, § 1144, but the courts have created
    a complete-preemption doctrine to go with it. Complete preemption is “a doctrine only a judge could
    love,” Bartholet v. Reishauer A.G. (Zurich), 
    953 F.2d 1073
    , 1075 (7th Cir. 1992), and one only
    judges could confusingly name. More productively thought of as a jurisdictional rather than a
    preemptive rule, complete preemption amounts to an exception to the well-pleaded complaint rule
    that converts a state-law claim that could have been brought under § 1132 into a federal claim, Aetna
    Health 
    Inc., 542 U.S. at 209
    , and makes the recharacterized claims removable to federal court,
    Metro. Life Ins. Co. v. Taylor, 
    481 U.S. 58
    , 67 (1987). Section 1132 creates ERISA’s civil action,
    permitting claims by a beneficiary “to recover benefits due to him under the terms of his plan, to
    enforce his rights under the terms of the plan, or to clarify his rights to future benefits under the
    terms of the plan.” 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B). Complete preemption applies when a plaintiff
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    Loffredo v. Daimler AG
    dresses up a claim for benefits under a pension plan in state-law clothing because ERISA has “so
    fill[ed] every nook and cranny” of the area “that it is not possible to frame a complaint under state
    law.” 
    Bartholet, 953 F.2d at 1075
    . Put another way, “a complaint reciting that the claim depends
    on the common law of contracts is really based on [ERISA] if the contract in question is a pension
    plan. Congress has blotted out (almost) all state law on the subject of pensions, so a complaint about
    pensions rests on federal law no matter what label its author attaches.” 
    Id. The distinction
    between the two doctrines comes up most frequently in removal cases, where
    the jurisdictional import of “complete preemption” applies. Here, however, we face no such
    problem, as the federal courts have jurisdiction over the case under another statute, the Class Action
    Fairness Act (CAFA). In this instance, all of plaintiffs’ claims, save the age-discrimination claim,
    conflict with ERISA in one way or another.
    A.
    Fiduciary Duty. When Congress exempts a plan from ERISA’s fiduciary-duty requirements,
    as it did with top-hat plans, plaintiffs may not use state law to put back in what Congress has taken
    out. See Pilot Life Ins. 
    Co., 481 U.S. at 54
    . Even if the facts of a given case make “an ERISA action
    [unavailable] against particular defendants, the relief provided by ERISA is the only relief available.”
    Smith v. Provident Bank, 
    170 F.3d 609
    , 615 (6th Cir. 1999). No one disputes that the plaintiffs are
    ERISA beneficiaries and may sue fiduciaries for money damages and non-fiduciaries for equitable
    relief under ERISA’s civil enforcement scheme. See 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a). The only question is
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    Loffredo v. Daimler AG
    whether plaintiffs may sue non-fiduciaries for money damages—whether state law may create an
    alternative to the civil enforcement mechanisms ERISA already provides. Penny/Ohlmann/Nieman,
    
    Inc., 399 F.3d at 698
    . It may not: ERISA preempts the plaintiffs’ claims for money damages against
    the non-fiduciary defendants.
    Our decision in Thurman v. Pfizer, Inc., 
    484 F.3d 855
    (6th Cir. 2007), says nothing to the
    contrary. Thurman sued for losses allegedly caused by misrepresentations that pre-dated his
    participation in the ERISA plan. Because he fell outside the class of people covered by ERISA,
    federal law did not preempt his state-law misrepresentation claim. 
    Id. at 861.
    The same is not true
    here.
    Judge Moore, joined by Judge Stranch, would reject this claim under the doctrine of complete
    preemption. The distinction between complete and express preemption matters most when it has
    jurisdictional consequences—when, for example, complete preemption creates federal
    jurisdiction—and in some instances it may affect the ease with which a complaint may be amended
    or indeed whether it needs to be amended. No such issues arise here. We have jurisdiction under
    CAFA, eliminating that potential problem. And it would be futile to give plaintiffs an opportunity
    to re-file an ERISA claim when the federal statute exempts top-hat plans from its coverage. As our
    jurisdiction is certain and as amending the complaint would be futile, I see no need for the court to
    resolve whether, as a matter of nomenclature, it is more appropriate to say that the claims are
    completely preempted under § 1132 or expressly preempted under § 1144. Judge Moore makes a
    plausible case for one tag line: complete preemption. But there is a plausible case to be made for
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    Loffredo v. Daimler AG
    the other: Express preemption is the label we gave a similar claim in PONI, and it seems a bit
    awkward (though that may not be saying much when it comes to “complete preemption”) to
    characterize a state-law claim as a federal claim in disguise when federal law expressly precludes
    such a claim, precludes in other words the disguised and undisguised version of the claim.
    B.
    Fraud. The executives also allege that the defendants breached “a legal and equitable duty
    to Plaintiffs, as participants in the . . . Trust, to inform them of the precarious financial position of”
    Chrysler. R. 31-2 at 20, PageID 473. But a state law that gives ERISA plan participants rights to
    information by virtue of their status as participants in the plan conflicts with ERISA’s existing
    disclosure requirements and enforcement mechanisms. Aetna Health 
    Inc., 542 U.S. at 209
    . Section
    1144(a) therefore expressly preempts these claims. See 
    id. Plaintiffs insist
    that the claim escapes preemption because it relies on an independent state-
    law duty to disclose that goes beyond the ERISA relationship. But state law imposes no such
    generalized duty. Under Michigan law, this type of claim, known as “silent fraud,” requires selective
    concealment that creates “a representation that what is disclosed is the whole truth. The gist of the
    action is fraudulently producing a false impression upon the mind of the other party.” Wolfe v. A.E.
    Kusterer & Co., 
    257 N.W. 729
    , 730 (Mich. 1934) (emphasis added). “[T]he touchstone of liability
    for . . . ‘silent fraud’ is that some form of representation has been made and that it was or proved to
    be false.” M&D, Inc. v. W.B. McConkey, 
    585 N.W.2d 33
    , 38 (Mich. Ct. App. 1998). In the absence
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    Loffredo v. Daimler AG
    of any allegation that the defendants made deceptively partial disclosures (as opposed to remaining
    completely silent), state law imposes no legal duty independent of the Plan relationship.
    The executives invoke two cases to support a broader duty to disclose, but neither one does
    the trick. In Clement-Rowe v. Michigan Health Care Corp., the court held that a company may not
    “avoid liability after omitting to disclose, when asked, known economic instability which later leads
    to economically-based layoffs.” 
    538 N.W.2d 20
    , 24 (Mich. Ct. App. 1995) (per curiam) (emphasis
    added). The executives do not claim they asked about Chrysler’s finances, making Clement-Rowe’s
    duty to disclose irrelevant. The other case—an unpublished federal district court opinion—draws
    on Clement-Rowe but does not discuss the “when asked” proviso. See Van Vels v. Premier Athletic
    Ctr. of Plainfield, Inc., No. 1:97-CV-665, 
    1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10993
    , at *22 (W.D. Mich. June
    9, 1998).
    C.
    Promissory estoppel. The executives also filed a promissory-estoppel claim stemming from
    Daimler’s alleged 1998 commitment to “see[] to it that [Chrysler] has sufficient assets to meet its
    obligations.” R. 32-1 at 9, PageID 462. There is some debate whether employees may bring
    promissory-estoppel claims directly under ERISA itself, see Bloemker v. Laborers’ Local 265
    Pension Fund, 
    605 F.3d 436
    , 440 (6th Cir. 2010), but we need not resolve the point. Either way, the
    executives face a problem. If ERISA permits such claims directly under the statute, the state-law
    promissory estoppel claims impermissibly “duplicate[]” ERISA’s enforcement mechanisms, and
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    Loffredo v. Daimler AG
    § 1132 completely preempts them—and any effort at amendment would be futile. Aetna Health 
    Inc., 542 U.S. at 209
    . If ERISA does not permit promissory-estoppel claims, the state-law claims amount
    to an impermissible alternative to ERISA’s reticulated enforcement regime, and § 1144 expressly
    preempts them. Penny/Ohlman/Nieman, 
    Inc., 399 F.3d at 698
    ; see also Armistead v. Vernitron
    Corp., 
    944 F.2d 1287
    , 1300 (6th Cir. 1991) (noting that modification of plan terms by promissory
    estoppel could jeopardize other participants’ benefits).
    One other problem defeats this theory. Even if the claim could survive preemption (or be
    reframed as an ERISA claim), the executives did not adequately plead it. Promissory estoppel
    presupposes a broken promise. See Gore v. Flagstar Bank, FSB, 
    711 N.W.2d 330
    , 333 (Mich. 2006)
    (asking whether “injustice can be avoided only by performance of the promise”); Cohen v. Cowles
    Media Co., 
    501 U.S. 663
    , 671 (1991). But the executives allege no such thing. They locate
    Daimler’s promise in its statement that “as long as [Daimler] is a majority stakeholder of any
    affiliate, [Daimler] internally sees to it that the affiliate has sufficient assets to meet its obligations
    with a third party.” R. 31-2 at 9, PageID 462. Yet, in discussing Daimler’s breach, they reframe the
    obligation, saying the company failed “to make certain that [Chrysler] had sufficient assets to
    purchase annuities or otherwise securitize the retirement benefits of the retired employees.” 
    Id. at 13.
    Ensuring internally that an affiliate has sufficient assets to meet its obligations is distinct from
    securitizing those obligations externally. In the context of an unfunded top-hat plan—designed not
    to secure benefits for beneficiaries, see Comrie v. IPSCO, Inc., 
    636 F.3d 839
    , 840 (7th Cir.
    2011)—that difference is significant. Because they do not allege Daimler failed to do what it said
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    Loffredo v. Daimler AG
    it would do, only that it failed to do more than it said it would do, the executives fail to state a
    cognizable claim for promissory estoppel for this reason as well.
    D.
    Age discrimination. The executives’ age-discrimination claim fares better. ERISA’s saving
    clause says that nothing in the statute “shall be construed to alter, amend, modify, invalidate, impair,
    or supersede any law of the United States.” 29 U.S.C. § 1144(d). The clause preserves other federal
    laws and some state laws that “provide[] a means of enforcing” a federal law’s commands. Shaw
    v. Delta Air Lines, Inc., 
    463 U.S. 85
    , 102 (1983).
    Shaw illustrates the some-state-laws point. It held that ERISA does not preempt state-law
    discrimination claims arising from conduct that is also illegal under Title VII. The Court reasoned
    that Title VII relies on state laws to enforce the federal law and that disallowing the parallel state
    claims would “impair” federal law in violation of § 1144(d). 
    Id. Like Title
    VII, the Age Discrimination in Employment Act uses state-law counterparts to
    bolster enforcement of the federal law. See 29 U.S.C. § 633(b). Section 1144(d) thus preserves
    state-law claims from preemption to the extent they mirror ADEA claims. See Devlin v. Transp.
    Commc’ns Int’l Union, 
    173 F.3d 94
    , 100 (2d Cir. 1999); Hurlic v. S. Cal. Gas Co., 
    539 F.3d 1024
    ,
    1036 (9th Cir. 2008). The plaintiffs’ age-discrimination claim falls into this category. They argue
    that securitizing the retirement benefits of active employees but not most retired employees had a
    disparate impact on older beneficiaries. The ADEA covers such claims. See Smith v. City of
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    Loffredo v. Daimler AG
    Jackson, 
    544 U.S. 228
    , 243 (2005). Nor is the claim an implausible one: The securitized
    beneficiaries on average were younger than the retirees whose benefits were not secured.
    The defendants offer three counter-arguments, all unavailing at the pleading stage. First, they
    point out that the ADEA gives employers an affirmative defense if the disparate impact results from
    reliance on “reasonable factors other than age.” See 29 U.S.C. § 623(f)(1); Meacham v. Knolls
    Atomic Power Lab., 
    554 U.S. 84
    , 87 (2008). True enough. But, as an affirmative defense not
    anticipated in the pleadings, it provides no basis for relief on a motion to dismiss, as opposed to a
    motion for summary judgment. See Pfeil v. State St. Bank & Trust Co., 
    671 F.3d 585
    , 599 (6th Cir.
    2012).
    Second, State Street argues that it cannot be subject to an employment-discrimination claim
    because it did not employ the plaintiffs. But Michigan and federal law extend liability to an
    employer’s “agent,” see Mich. Comp. Laws § 37.2201(a); 29 U.S.C. § 630(b), and the complaint
    alleges State Street acted as Chrysler’s agent.
    Third, defendants claim that Michigan’s three-year statute of limitations bars these claims.
    See Mich. Comp. Laws § 600.5805(1), (10). Under Michigan law, a claim “accrues at the time the
    wrong upon which the claim is based was done regardless of the time when damage results. 
    Id. § 600.5827.
    The Michigan Supreme Court has read this statute to require an “actionable wrong,”
    meaning that all of the elements of the claim must be present before the limitations period begins
    to run. See Connelly v. Paul Ruddy’s Equip. Repair & Serv. Co., 
    200 N.W.2d 70
    , 72–73 (Mich.
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    1972). One element of a disparate-impact claim is an adverse impact, which is to say an injury. See
    Donnelly v. R.I. Bd. of Governors for Higher Educ., 
    110 F.3d 2
    , 5 n.2 (1st Cir. 1997); Coe v. Yellow
    Freight Sys., Inc., 
    646 F.2d 444
    , 451 (10th Cir. 1981). Yet this impact/injury did not become
    actionably adverse here until it was clear that the treatment of the active employees—buying them
    taxable annuities in exchange for their right to continue receiving payments from the trust—was
    more favorable than the treatment of the retirees because the trust lacked funds to pay out the
    remaining claims. The complaint suggests this may have occurred as late as 2009, making the
    lawsuit timely, at least according to the pleadings. The age-discrimination claim is remanded for
    further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    III.
    ERISA claims. Having decided that ERISA preempts three of the plaintiffs’ four state-law
    claims, we must consider whether the district court erred in denying plaintiffs leave to amend their
    complaint to raise new ERISA-based claims. The plaintiffs properly presented just one of those
    claims to the district court: that they are entitled to equitable restitution and an accounting under 29
    U.S.C. § 1132(a)(3), which authorizes “other appropriate equitable relief.”
    To plead claims for equitable relief, however, the plaintiffs would have to allege either that
    the defendants currently (and improperly) possess the assets dispersed from the trust or that they
    retain profits generated from that property. See Great-West Life & Annuity Ins. Co. v. Knudson, 
    534 U.S. 204
    , 214 (2002) (“[F]or restitution to lie in equity, the action generally must seek not to impose
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    personal liability on the defendant, but to restore to the plaintiff particular funds or property in the
    defendant’s possession.”); 
    id. at 214
    n.2 (discussing equitable accounting). The plaintiffs never
    alleged any such facts, and in deciding whether to grant leave to amend the district court was not
    required to assume that the plaintiffs would allege new facts to support new claims. Cf. Harvey v.
    Great Seneca Fin. Corp., 
    453 F.3d 324
    , 328 (6th Cir. 2006) (“[T]his court should not assume facts
    that were not pled.”).
    Before the district court, the plaintiffs also argued they could bring claims under 29 U.S.C.
    § 1132(a)(1)(B) “to recover the benefits which they have lost as a . . . result of Defendants’ conduct
    in violation of the terms of the” Plan and trust documents. R. 31 at 33, PageID 436. Yet they did
    not allege conduct of the defendants that violated provisions of any trust document, and as a result
    the district court denied their motion to amend. On appeal, the plaintiffs for the first time point to
    particular conduct and particular contractual obligations to support their claim of breach. But
    because the plaintiffs did not present these claims to the district court, they cannot do so for the first
    time on appeal. See McFarland v. Henderson, 
    307 F.3d 402
    , 407 (6th Cir. 2002).
    IV.
    Dismissal of claims against Zetsche. One of the defendants, Dieter Zetsche, is a citizen and
    resident of Germany. The parties stipulated in November 2010 that the plaintiffs failed to serve him
    with the complaint. When the district court, in June 2011, addressed the other defendants’ motions
    to dismiss, it noted that the claims against Zetsche were identical to the claims against LaSorda but
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    that Zetsche had not filed a motion to dismiss because he had not been served. The district court
    gave the plaintiffs ten days to show cause why Zetsche should not be dismissed from the case on the
    same merits-based grounds as LaSorda. The plaintiffs did not respond, and the district court
    dismissed their claims against Zetsche in July 2011. Due to their failure to object to Zetsche’s
    dismissal in the district court, they have no right to complain about the dismissal now (although, as
    noted, the district court should not have dismissed the age-discrimination claim). See 
    McFarland, 307 F.3d at 407
    .
    V.
    For these reasons, we reverse the district court’s dismissal of the state-law age-discrimination
    claim, affirm its dismissal of the other issues and remand.
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    KAREN NELSON MOORE, Circuit Judge, concurring in the judgment. To paraphrase
    Tolstoy, each ERISA preemption case is complicated in its own way. Although I agree that
    Loffredo’s state-law claims for breach of fiduciary duty and silent fraud are preempted, his age-
    discrimination claim is not preempted, and his promissory-estoppel claim was not adequately
    pleaded, I write separately in hopes of providing both a degree of clarity to at least one aspect of this
    tangled web and a more thorough analysis of the preemption issue as it relates to the case before us.
    ERISA can preempt state-law claims in two ways: complete preemption under 29 U.S.C.
    § 1132(a) and express preemption under 29 U.S.C. § 1144. Normally, the consequence of the former
    is that the suit containing those claims can be removed to federal court; a completely preempted
    state-law claim “arises under” federal law and thus vests the district court with federal-question
    jurisdiction. Wright v. Gen. Motors Corp., 
    262 F.3d 610
    , 613 (6th Cir. 2001). By contrast, express
    preemption under § 1144 is a defense; it is grounds for dismissal, but not for removal. See 
    id. at 614–15;
    Warner v. Ford Motor Co., 
    46 F.3d 531
    , 533–35 (6th Cir. 1995) (en banc). Our prior
    ERISA preemption cases have not always clearly differentiated between the two concepts, but we
    should take care to do so in the future.
    In addition to its jurisdictional impact, complete preemption of a state-law claim by ERISA
    also affects how the federal court should treat that claim, regardless of how it arrived in federal court.
    Because state-law claims that are completely preempted are, in fact, federal claims, the court should
    treat them as such, evaluating them as ERISA claims and, unless doing so would be futile, granting
    the plaintiff leave to amend the complaint to re-plead those claims to conform with ERISA. The
    - 17 -
    No. 11-1824
    Loffredo v. Daimler AG
    question in such situations is whether the plaintiff could state an ERISA claim based on the
    allegations underlying his ostensible state-law claim, not whether, looking at the complaint as
    pleaded, he has done so; a plaintiff not expecting to find himself with an ERISA claim may not have
    pleaded every known fact that could support such a claim (such as identifying specific Plan terms
    that the defendants violated in support of an § 1132(a)(1)(B) claim), and should thus have an
    opportunity to do so. The plaintiff could also seek to amend the complaint with new ERISA claims,
    subject to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 15. By contrast, state-law claims that are expressly
    preempted under § 1144 should be dismissed with prejudice. See Briscoe v. Fine, 
    444 F.3d 478
    , 501
    (6th Cir. 2006). The difference in treatment stems from the fact that completely preempted claims
    “fall within the scope” of ERISA’s civil-enforcement regime, Aetna Health Inc. v. Davila, 
    542 U.S. 200
    , 221 (2004), and expressly preempted claims interfere with that regime.
    Daimler argued before the district court that Loffredo’s state-law claims should be dismissed
    as completely preempted. The district court correctly recognized that this argument misunderstands
    the doctrine of complete preemption. Complete preemption under § 1132(a) is not grounds for
    dismissal. See Franciscan Skemp Healthcare, Inc. v. Cent. States Joint Bd. Health & Welfare Trust
    Fund, 
    538 F.3d 594
    , 596 (7th Cir. 2008) (“Complete preemption [is] really a jurisdictional rather
    than a preemption doctrine . . . .”); 13D Charles Alan Wright, Arthur Miller, Edward Cooper &
    Richard Freer, Federal Practice & Procedure § 3566 at 297 (3d ed. 2008) (“‘Complete preemption’
    . . . is actually a doctrine of subject matter jurisdiction.”). If an ostensible state-law claim is in fact
    an ERISA claim, it cannot be dismissed as preempted by ERISA; that is, ERISA cannot preempt an
    - 18 -
    No. 11-1824
    Loffredo v. Daimler AG
    ERISA claim. See Ackerman v. Fortis Benefits Ins. Co., 
    254 F. Supp. 2d 792
    , 816–17 (S.D. Ohio
    2003). A state-law claim that is not completely preempted can nonetheless be expressly preempted,
    and thus subject to dismissal, under § 1144. See Thurman v. Pfizer, Inc., 
    484 F.3d 855
    , 860–61 (6th
    Cir. 2007).
    Just as the results of the two types of preemption are different, so are the analyses. A
    plaintiff’s state-law claim is completely preempted “if [he], at some point in time, could have
    brought his claim under ERISA” and “there is no other independent legal duty that is implicated by
    a defendant’s actions.” 
    Davila, 542 U.S. at 210
    ; see also Montefiore Med. Ctr. v. Teamsters Local
    272, 
    642 F.3d 321
    , 328 (2d Cir. 2011) (describing complete preemption under ERISA as a “two-part
    test”); Marin Gen. Hosp. v. Modesto & Empire Traction Co., 
    581 F.3d 941
    , 946 (9th Cir. 2009)
    (same); Franciscan Skemp 
    Healthcare, 538 F.3d at 597
    (same). A plaintiff “could have brought”
    a state-law claim under ERISA if he or she has standing to bring such a claim and if the claim can
    be construed as a colorable claim for recovery under ERISA. See Montefiore Med. 
    Ctr., 642 F.3d at 328
    & n.7. When making this determination, we should consider the substance of the state-law
    claim, not its label. See 
    Davila, 542 U.S. at 214
    ; Peters v. Lincoln Elec. Co., 
    285 F.3d 456
    , 469 (6th
    Cir. 2002).
    A claim is expressly preempted, and thus subject to dismissal, if it is based on a state law that
    “may now or hereafter relate to any employee benefit plan.” 29 U.S.C. § 1144(a). State-law claims
    “relate to” ERISA plans for § 1144 preemption purposes if they “‘(1) mandate employee benefit
    structures or their administration; (2) provide alternate enforcement mechanisms; or (3) bind
    - 19 -
    No. 11-1824
    Loffredo v. Daimler AG
    employers or plan administrators to particular choices or preclude uniform administrative practice,
    thereby functioning as a regulation of an ERISA plan itself’” or otherwise seek a remedy that is
    “primarily plan-related.” 
    Thurman, 484 F.3d at 861
    (quoting Penny/Ohlmann/Nieman, Inc. v. Miami
    Valley Pension Corp. (PONI), 
    399 F.3d 692
    , 698 (6th Cir. 2005)) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    Applying these standards to the case before us reveals this ERISA preemption case’s own
    brand of complication. The allegations underlying Loffredo’s state-law breach-of-fiduciary-duty
    claim—misuse of funds, self-dealing, actions not in participants’ best interests—appear to be the
    precise type of claim that “could have [been] brought” under § 1132(a)(2). 
    Davila, 542 U.S. at 210
    ;
    see also Smith v. Provident Bank, 
    170 F.3d 609
    , 613–14 (6th Cir. 1999) (applying the doctrine of
    complete preemption to § 1132(a)(2)); 29 U.S.C. §§ 1104, 1109 (describing fiduciary duties under
    ERISA). As a beneficiary of the Plan, Loffredo unquestionably would have standing to bring such
    a claim. The twist is that ERISA’s fiduciary-responsibility provisions do not apply to top-hat plans.
    See 29 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(1). Nonetheless, we have held that “it is the nature of the claim—breach
    of fiduciary duty—that determines whether ERISA applies, not whether the claim will succeed.”
    
    Smith, 170 F.3d at 613
    . To ensure uniformity and consistency, Congress intended fiduciary-duty
    claims to proceed through the system established by ERISA, subject to the limitations that ERISA
    imposes. As to Davila’s second prong, Daimler’s decision to purchase annuities selectively does
    not implicate any duty independent of ERISA; Loffredo does not contend otherwise. Unlike Judge
    - 20 -
    No. 11-1824
    Loffredo v. Daimler AG
    Sutton, I believe that this claim was completely preempted.1 This claim clearly cannot succeed as
    an § 1132(a)(2) claim, however, so leave to amend would be futile; dismissal would be proper for
    failure to state a claim under ERISA, not because it is preempted by ERISA.2
    Loffredo’s silent-fraud claim alleges a failure to disclose information about Chrysler’s
    financial situation. Because ERISA does not provide a cause of action for failure to disclose such
    information, Loffredo could not have brought this claim under ERISA. Although it is not a direct
    claim for benefits, the resulting harm from the alleged fraud was that Loffredo did not take steps to
    access those benefits prior to Chrysler’s bankruptcy. By seeking to hold the defendants liable for
    conduct that allegedly resulted in lost benefits without challenging the denial of benefits itself,
    Loffredo is attempting to create an “alternate enforcement mechanism” to ERISA’s vehicle for
    recovery of benefits such that the claim is expressly preempted under § 1144. 
    Thurman, 484 F.3d at 861
    (quoting 
    PONI, 399 F.3d at 698
    ).
    Finally, Loffredo’s failure to plead a claim for promissory estoppel renders unnecessary any
    preemption analysis as to that claim. I note only that, as described above, different consequences
    follow from preemption under § 1132(a) or § 1144, so we cannot simply state that a state-law claim
    1
    Judge Sutton phrases the question broadly as whether a plaintiff can sue a non-fiduciary for
    money damages under state law, but the more precise question is whether the plaintiff can sue
    individuals or entities for breach of fiduciary duty under state law when ERISA does not impose
    fiduciary duties upon them.
    2
    Even construing this claim somewhat awkwardly as an § 1132(a)(1)(B) claim, in which the
    defendants denied Loffredo benefits or violated the Plan by failing to purchase an annuity for him,
    granting leave to replead the claim as such appears futile. As the district court concluded, the Plan
    authorizes the administrators to purchase annuities on a selective basis.
    - 21 -
    No. 11-1824
    Loffredo v. Daimler AG
    is preempted either way and be done with it.
    As the experience of courts around the nation, including this court and even the Supreme
    Court, demonstrates, clarity may be a virtue that simply does not “relate to” ERISA preemption.
    With these observations, I concur in the judgment remanding the age-discrimination claims and
    otherwise affirming the judgment of the district court.
    - 22 -
    No. 11-1824
    Loffredo v. Daimler AG
    JANE B. STRANCH, Circuit Judge. I concur in Judge Sutton’s opinion with the exception
    of Sections II. through the conclusion of Section II.A. I join Section II.C. based on the reasoning that
    the executives did not adequately plead promissory estoppel. I concur fully in Judge Moore’s
    opinion.
    - 23 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 11-1824

Filed Date: 9/25/2012

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021

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