Retirement plan participants may sue
WASHINGTON
(AP) – The Supreme Court ruled Feb. 20 that individual participants in the most
common type of retirement plan can sue under a pension protection law to
recover their losses. The unanimous decision has implications for 50 million
workers with $2.7 trillion invested in 401(k) retirement plans.
James
LaRue of Southlake, Texas, said the value of his
stock market holdings plunged $150,000 when administrators at his retirement
plan failed to follow his instructions to switch to safer investments. The
issue in the LaRue case was whether the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act permits an individual account holder to sue plan
administrators for breaching their fiduciary duties.
The
language of the law refers to recovering money for the “plan” rather than for
an individual, raising the question of whether a participant can sue solely for
himself.
Justice
John Paul Stevens, in his opinion for the court, said that such lawsuits are
allowed. “Fiduciary misconduct need not threaten the solvency of the entire
plan to reduce benefits below the amount that participants would otherwise
receive,” Stevens said.
The
decision overturned a ruling by the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in
Richmond, Va.
Unlike
people enrolled in traditional pension plans, employees in 401(k) plans, which
have exploded in number in the past two decades, choose from a menu of options
on where to invest their money. That puts workers squarely in the middle of
decision-making about their pensions and inevitably leads to the kind of
disputes LaRue has with his plan’s administrators.
“Defined
contribution plans dominate the retirement plan scene today,” unlike when ERISA
was enacted in the mid-1970s, Stevens said.
Many
traditional pension plans guaranteeing a fixed monthly benefit have either been
frozen or terminated, and 401(k) plans are the main source of retirement
income, said the Air Line Pilots Association, which represents 60,000 pilots at
41 air carriers.
The Bush administration argued in support of workers. The
government said the appeals court ruling barring LaRue’s
lawsuit would leave 401(k) participants without a meaningful remedy from any
federal, state or local court when plan administrators fail to live up to their
duties.